AD Is ‘Open’ to New York Knicks, but Pels Would Need to Believe in Porzingod

NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA - JANUARY 23: Anthony Davis #23 of the New Orleans Pelicans looks on against the Detroit Pistons at Smoothie King Center on January 23, 2019 in New Orleans, Louisiana.  NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images)

Chris Graythen/Getty Images

It may be Super Bowl week, but yet again, the greatest soap opera in sports—the NBA and its superstars’ desireshas grabbed the headlines.

New Orleans Pelicans star Anthony Davis’ request to be traded, and the growing possibility that LeBron James, Kyrie Irving, Kevin Durant and Kristaps Porzingis all may play a role in Davis’ ultimate destination, will have fans, execs, playerseveryoneon edge with every alert their phones signal until the trade deadline passes a mere 10 days from now.

It doesn’t hurt that league sources have two of the most storied franchises in the two biggest markets among the potential landing places: the Los Angeles Lakers and New York Knicks. While the Pelicans have vowed not to be bull-rushed into moving Davis, who can’t become a free agent until 2020, dealing him before the Feb. 7 deadline could make sense.

Yes, the Lakers and their quest to pair another star with James has garnered most of the attention, especially considering that Davis and his agent, Rich Paul, are reportedly expected to make it known L.A. is their preferred destination (per ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski), but let’s start with the Knicks. Perhaps considered an underdog in this race for Davis, New York suddenly finds itself a potential powerbroker for the first time in a looonnnggg time. Few fanbases are more delusional than those of the Lakers or Knicks when it comes to believing every star on the planet wants to play for their teams, but at least the Lakers have several recent examples of big-time players electing to play in purple and gold, most notably James.

The Knicks, on the other hand, haven’t been a preferred destination for years—but there are indications of that potentially changing. League sources believe they have “a strong chance” of luring Durant should he leave the Golden State Warriors this summer and that Davis is “open” to New York as a landing place as well. Throw in a pick in this year’s NBA draft that could potentially add Duke’s Zion Williamson or RJ Barrett or Murray State’s Ja Morant, and there’s finally a reason for optimism in Manhattan.

To get Davis, a deal would likely have to involve Porzingis. The hitch there is that any deal involving Porzingis, the soon-to-be restricted free agent, would have to be consummated before next week’s trade deadline. Porzingis, though, is still recovering from tearing his ACL last February, and a source familiar with his rehabilitation put his current condition at “75 percent of the way back to playing.”

As celebrated as Porzingis was in New York before the injury—feted with such nicknames as Porzingod and Unicorn for a meteoric rise to All-Star status in his third year before injuring his left knee—several opposing executives and scouts questioned whether he’s physically capable of carrying the load of a franchise cornerstone. One scout even derisively compared him to Davis as a big man loaded with talent and potential but unable to stay healthy. “Done nothing and anointed a star,” the scout said.

Though the Knicks have been working to improve their relationship with Kristaps Porzingis, they may have to consider parting with him if they hope to land Anthony Davis in a trade.

Though the Knicks have been working to improve their relationship with Kristaps Porzingis, they may have to consider parting with him if they hope to land Anthony Davis in a trade.Mary Altaffer/Associated Press

The other issue is the uncertainty over how enamored Porzingis is with staying in New York. That troubled at least one small-market GM. “You’re going to have to give him the max,” he said, “but if he isn’t happy in New York, what are the chances he’s going to be happy in Portland or Indiana or San Antonio?”

Knicks GM Scott Perry, hired last summer, and his handpicked head coach, David Fizdale, are still paying the price for a relationship that went sour between Porzingis and the franchise under Phil Jackson, team sources say, largely because of Jackson’s insistence that the team run the Triangle offense he utilized while winning championships with the Bulls and Lakers. After Jackson acolytes Derek Fisher and Kurt Rambis were let go and Jeff Hornacek took over, a team source said they would work on offenses more conducive to their talent until Jackson walked into the practice facility and they were forced to practice the Triangle.

Porzingis is currently going through solitary basketball-related workouts with the coaching staff, and Fizdale, a source said, is spending as much time with him as he can, while Perry and team president Steve Mills are trying to forge a better relationship with his older brother, Janis, a former player in Latvia who has taken over as Kristaps’ agent after Andy Miller, his previous representation, lost his NBA Players’ Association certification as a result of the NCAA’s probe into illegal payments made to collegiate players.

Getting a read on Janis’ feelings about the current regime and his brother’s future with the Knicks has been difficult, league sources say.

Short of a blockbuster deal for Davis before the trade deadline, the likeliest scenario is that the Knicks re-sign Porzingis or match whatever offer sheet he might receive, even if it’s only to retain him until he returns to form and makes his interest in staying or going clear.

Back to the Lakers, who have been rumored for months to be Davis’ top choice if he forced his way out of New Orleans. Both James and Davis are represented by Paul of Klutch Sports Group. James went so far as to publicly say it would be “amazing” to have Davis as a teammate before the two had dinner together in L.A. in late December following the Lakers’ 112-104 win over the Pelicans. That inspired the NBA to send a league-wide notice that “Employment contracts are to be respected, and conduct that interferes with contractual employment relationships is prohibited.”

Both represented by the same agent, Davis and LeBron James may soon be teammates if the Lakers can convince the Pelicans to send their franchise center to L.A., where many expect he wants to go.

Both represented by the same agent, Davis and LeBron James may soon be teammates if the Lakers can convince the Pelicans to send their franchise center to L.A., where many expect he wants to go.Jae C. Hong/Associated Press/Associated Press

That the league is keeping a close eye on the Lakers, who already earned a $500,000 fine for tampering with free-agent-to-be Paul George two summers ago, isn’t the only reason Davis-to-L.A. might not be a done deal. One Eastern Conference executive cautioned that Paul might not have the same sway to deliver Davis as he did with LeBron. “The dad is going to have a say,” the source said, referring to Anthony Davis Sr., who apparently is weighing the vast business potential of his son as the King of New York as opposed to the Prince of Bel-Air.

No matter what Davis wants, it’s still the Pelicans’ choice as to when and where to send their franchise star, and that’s where the Knicks may have an advantage. An informal poll of several executives and scouts considered a package that included the Knicks’ young big man, Porzingis, superior to any combination the Lakers could offer from their young core of Lonzo Ball, Brandon Ingram, Kyle Kuzma and Josh Hart. If there was any question on that, it has been answered, one Western Conference GM said, by their performance since James went down with a strained groin on Christmas (6-10).

“We were all monitoring the Lakers to see if these guys were legit or if LeBron was covering up all the warts,” he said. “The value of those Lakers is less today than it was when LeBron went down.”

The Knicks could be buyers for Davis even if the Pelicans wait to make a deal this summer, but the deal would involve their first-round pick rather than Porzingis. Their willingness to do that will likely hinge upon whether or not Durant decides to head east. If he does with the interest of competing for a title as quickly as possible, several league executives could see the Knicks accommodating Durant the same way the Cavaliers did James when he returned to Cleveland, trading No. 1 pick Andrew Wiggins for proven veteran big man Kevin Love.

The Lakers may need to get creative to force the Pelicans’ hand, but they have reason to be. While the news since last summer has been largely about stars not interested in being LeBron’s sidekick—George’s decision to re-sign with the Thunder, Jimmy Butler not having the Lakers on his reported preferred list and Kawhi Leonard reportedly favoring the Clippers—a source close to the Celtics confirmed that Kyrie Irving is genuinely interested in reuniting with his former Cavaliers teammate. “That is for real,” the source said.

A core of James, Davis and Irving would be enough to get visions of Title 18 dancing in Lakers fans’ heads.

Kyrie Irving's potential interest in rejoining James after this season could complicate the Lakers' efforts to acquire Davis.

Kyrie Irving’s potential interest in rejoining James after this season could complicate the Lakers’ efforts to acquire Davis.Michael Dwyer/Associated Press

But talk of adding Irving to the mix is where this all gets tangled. The Celtics are also interested in Davis, league sources said, but the collective bargaining agreement prevents them from dealing for a second player signed under the “Rose rule” extension before the summer; Irving, acquired from Cleveland last summer, was their first.

The Pelicans trading Davis for Irving, if he is eager to reunite with James, doesn’t make much sense, other than it would put Davis in the other conference and the Celtics would likely sweeten the deal by adding one or more of their bevy of first-round picks. Other teams have dealt for stars whose stated or reported desire was to be elsewhere (OKC and George, Leonard and the Raptors), so it wouldn’t be a first.

Then again, while the Pelicans put out a statement that they will not be rushed into moving Davis simply because he has asked to be traded—his contract has two more seasons, with a player option for 2020-21—they risk his value depreciating with every day that draws that draws them closer to his pending free agency.

Whether or not the Lakers could facilitate adding both Davis and Irving remains to be seen. If they can’t, could we see a race between the two for the shotgun seat next to LeBron?

Big names. Big teams. Big moves. Making the NBA a big deal right in the middle of the NFL’s biggest week. Biggest party crash ever?

Ric Bucher covers the NBA for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter: @RicBucher.

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5G changes how we work, play, and collaborate

The age of 5G has arrived, and we’re just beginning to see the true potential of 5G revolutionizing how we communicate, collaborate, work, play — essentially how we live in the digital age. With unheard of download speeds and extremely low latency, this next generation of wireless technology is purpose-built to make download lags, streaming glitches, and the dreaded mid-meeting face freeze relics of the past. 

In the first article in this series, we turned to experts at Qualcomm Technologies — the inventor of foundational technologies for 5G — to explain these new capabilities and why they’re so exciting. Now it’s time to geek out about some amazing experiences that 5G experts envision, and to speculate on the exciting future scenarios that we’ll owe to 5G.   

Real-time collaboration

Image: Qualcomm Technologies

One of the game-changers of 5G is its extraordinarily low latency, or the time between data request and delivery. This means virtually instant cloud access designed to unleash a new wave of real-time experiences that allow  us to collaborate like never before. 

At the Qualcomm® Snapdragon™ Tech Summit in Maui, the world got its first glimpse of live VR telemedicine, through a demo with Verizon and Columbia University. Making use of the almost zero lag time of 5G, the demo showed two people remotely engaged in real-time actions, simulating how a doctor and patient could engage in real-time rehab exercises, utilizing 5G’s live 4K video streaming and low latency capabilities. Verizon’s 5G hotspot is expected to launch sometime in 2019, in a device made by Inseego that utilizes the Snapdragon 855 Mobile Platform and Snapdragon X50 5G Modem. VR telemedicine is just one of the revolutionary real-world (and potentially life-saving) applications of 5G.

5G holds potential for collaboration not only in medicine, but also in the workplace across many industries. While most of us are already accustomed to connecting instantly via cloud-based apps, imagine creating projects together in real-time thanks to 5G’s low latency.

And what about social media interactions? Today we’re at the phase of sharing our daily “stories,” but the stories are always from one vantage point only. We want to see an app that allows us to create high-quality group stories—like a shared video document on steroids. 

Imagine going on a road trip or to a concert. All of your friends could pull up the app and add video clips from their own devices and begin editing the “master” video simultaneously.

This type of real-time collaboration isn’t possible with 4G, due not only to the amount of time it takes to download and upload massive file sizes of high-resolution images and videos, but also to the fact that real-time collaboration requires almost zero lag. But 5G’s super low latency is designed to ensure that each collaborator sees the other edits being made in real-time, so you’re not tripping over each other as you work. Imagine fun, professional-looking group stories as an everyday thing.

Augmented Reality grows up

Image: Qualcomm technologies

Most consumers are familiar with AR by now thanks to simple executions with pre-set digital objects that use basic AR mapping to overlay virtual objects on the real world.

But with the speed of 5G networks, experts believe that AR interactions are likely to become more meaningful and attuned to the ever-changing details of the world around us. The recent  Snapdragon Tech Summit in Maui included demoes of amazing new AR capabilities. 

Qualcomm Technologies worked with AT&T to show off AR Voyager, which could transform the classroom by allowing you to visit far away 3D environments—imagine Yellowstone National Park or the Great Wall of China—right on your phone. The user could then enter the environment for a real-time experience that adjusts to his or her movements. Qualcomm Technologies, in collaboration with AT&T, showcased how 5G will handle volumetric video, capturing an entire 3D space, which entails a massive amount of data, to create VR videos with virtually no lag time.

Image: Qualcomm Technologies

It’s also fun to imagine how 5G’s more sophisticated AR capabilities play a role in social settings. Let’s say you’re with a group of friends trying to figure out where to grab a drink or watch the game. You’ve consulted Yelp, but that doesn’t tell you anything about real time elements like crowd size and noise level. 5G could inform your decisions with a “Yelp meets OKCupid” type app, where you could input specific parameters and receive recommendations for the best bars, based on what’s happening inside them at that very moment. The app could pull data from the business itself, and from the user’s past decisions. 

A meaningful virtual display that interacts with the constantly changing real world: that’s the true promise of AR made possible thanks to 5G.

A platform for tomorrow’s more connected world

The near future of 5G use cases goes well beyond enhanced mobile broadband. 5G NR is building a new infrastructure for a world that has become increasingly connected. From industrial automation to remote healthcare to building sustainable and energy-efficient cities, 5G aims to bring the mobile ecosystem to new industries, with huge results. 

Smart cars of the near future could communicate directly with people, infrastructure and other vehicles, thanks to 5G vehicle-to-everything communications technology. Transportation safety could improve thanks to vehicles that share real-time information with other cars on the road. For instance, when your car is about to shift into the next lane, the other cars on the road will already know. Imagine a freeway full of cars driving in a highly coordinated fashion, sharing real-time 3D maps and more. 

Qualcomm Technologies is not only building the tech we need for a smart and streamlined future, but also bringing to life some of the amazing use cases they have for 5G. 

Qualcomm Snapdragon is a product of Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. and/or its subsidiaries

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Stacey Abrams to give Democratic response to State of the Union


Stacey Abrams

Stacey Abrams will deliver Democrats’ response to President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address next week. | Jessica McGowan/Getty Images

Stacey Abrams will deliver the Democratic response to President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address next week, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said Tuesday.

Abrams drew national attention as the Democratic nominee for Georgia governor in a contested race against Brian Kemp. Abrams eventually conceded, but blasted Kemp, who was secretary of state, for how he handled the election and said he pushed suppressed voter suppression efforts.

Story Continued Below

Although she lost the race, Abrams is viewed as a rising star in the party. Most recently, Democrats have pushed her to consider running in Georgia’s 2020 Senate race against Republican Sen. David Perdue. She recently met with Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee Chairwoman Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.) about the 2020 race.

At a press conference, Schumer said he asked Abrams three weeks ago and is “very excited” that she agreed to deliver the Democratic rebuttal.

“She is just a great spokesperson, she’s an incredible leader she has led the charge for voting rights which is at the root of just about everything else,” Schumer said.

Trump is scheduled to deliver the State of the Union address on Feb. 5.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) re-invited Trump to deliver the address Monday after rescinding his invitation amid the government shutdown, citing security concerns.

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Apple was warned of FaceTime bug over a week ago

Disclosure

Every product here is independently selected by Mashable journalists. If you buy something featured, we may earn an affiliate commission which helps support our work.

Hahaha.
Hahaha.

Image: Stephanie Keith / getty

2017%252f09%252f18%252f2b%252fjackbw5.32076.jpg%252f90x90By Jack Morse

What exactly did Apple know, and when exactly did Apple know it?

iPhone owners around the country are asking questions today, following news of a disastrous FaceTime bug that let bad actors turn unsuspecting owners’ smartphones into spy devices. The bug, temporarily rendered inoperable by Apple’s late Jan. 28 disabling of group FaceTime altogether, only garnered widespread attention yesterday — but there is evidence that the Cupertino-based company was warned about it as early as Jan. 20, and yet did not alert its customers. 

SEE ALSO: Disastrous FaceTime bug lets you spy on person you’re calling

First, it’s worth noting just how bad this bug was. At present, it looks like anyone with an iPhone capable of group FaceTime was vulnerable. Bad actors could remotely activate victims’ microphones, and, in some cases, even cameras, without their knowledge. So you might think that Apple would treat reports of this bug with the utmost seriousness. However, it sure looks like you’d be wrong. 

On Jan. 20, the Twitter account @MGT7500 tagged the official Apple Support account with a dire warning. 

“My teen found a major security flaw in Apple’s new iOS,” read the tweet. “He can listen in to your iPhone/iPad without your approval. I have video. Submitted bug report to @AppleSupport…waiting to hear back to provide details. Scary stuff!”

My teen found a major security flaw in Apple’s new iOS. He can listen in to your iPhone/iPad without your approval. I have video. Submitted bug report to @AppleSupport…waiting to hear back to provide details. Scary stuff! #apple #bugreport @foxnews

— MGT7 (@MGT7500) January 21, 2019

And the tweets didn’t stop there. The next day, Jan. 21, the same account tweeted directly at Apple CEO Tim Cook. 

“@tim_cook This is real…trying to get Apple’s attention to get this addressed,” it reads. “I’m just a mom of a teenager who found a huge problem in your new update. I’ve verified it myself…someone from Apple should respond to us.”

@tim_cook This is real…trying to get Apple’s attention to get this addressed. I’m just a mom of a teenager who found a huge problem in your new update. I’ve verified it myself…someone from Apple should respond to us. https://t.co/S6qyXts6GF

— MGT7 (@MGT7500) January 21, 2019

OK, so, maybe Apple Support and Tim Cook aren’t checking their Twitter accounts that often. Well, what about letters and emails?

I have letters, emails, tweets and msgs. sent to Apple for 10+ days reporting the Group FaceTime bug that lets someone listen in. My teenager discovered it! Never heard back from them. #apple #facetimebug @FoxNews @cnbc @CNN

— MGT7 (@MGT7500) January 29, 2019

And what about a bug report filed through the proper channels?

After several emails w/ Apple, they told me I could register as a developer to submit the bug report which I did (even though I’m the farthest thing from a developer). Also emailed it directly to product-security@apple with full details.

— MGT7 (@MGT7500) January 29, 2019

I reported the bug there after registering as a developer (even though I’m not, I was told I could) and also emailed product-security@apple directly.

— MGT7 (@MGT7500) January 29, 2019

Mashable reached out to the Twitter account in question in an attempt to verify the claims, but received no response as of press time. We also reached out to Apple, and asked both how long the FaceTime bug was present and if the company was notified of it prior to yesterday. Apple didn’t get back to us. 

However, the public tweets from over a week ago detailing what looks to be the very bug that gained notoriety only yesterday speak for themselves. Apple appears to have been notified, but took no outward steps to warn the general public to just how vulnerable they were. 

From a company that outwardly professes to care so much about user privacy, this is especially troubling. If only someone had used the FaceTime bug on Tim Cook yesterday, maybe we could have gotten some insight into the company’s thinking. Because as it currently stands, Apple has some explaining to do. 

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Super Bowl Commercials

  1. Super Bowl LIII Ad Tracker

    via Adweek

  2. Is Pepsi OK?

    Darren Rovell @darrenrovell

    Love This: Pepsi addresses the uncomfortable “Is Pepsi OK?” line in Super Bowl spot with @iamcardib & @SteveCarell https://t.co/1UXPMDHl1z

  3. Banned Super Bowl Ad 😅

    DEVOUR Foods @devourfoods

    Watch the uncensored #BigGame commercial that was just a bit too spicy for TV. #DEVOURFoodPorn https://t.co/0GOWZjLPDu

  4. Eli and Odell Was So Perfect Last Year

    The Checkdown @thecheckdown

    Greatest Super Bowl commercial ever? 🤔🐐@obj #SuperBowl https://t.co/V3g9YpUGHd

  5. How Many Bud Light Ads Will Feature the Bud Knight?

    via Action Network

  6. The Most Popular Super Bowl Ads of All-Time

    via Town & Country

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Venezuela prosecutor moves to place travel ban on Guaido

Venezuela’s chief prosecutor has asked the Supreme Court to place a travel ban on self-proclaimed interim president Juan Guaido, as well to freeze the opposition leader’s accounts.

The United States, along with several other countries, have recognised Guaido as Venezuela’s legitimate head of state and denounced leftist President Nicolas Maduro as a usurper.

Maduro, sworn in earlier this month for a second term after last year’s disputed elections, accuses Guaido of staging a US-directed coup against him.

On Tuesday, Attorney General Tarek Saab said on state television he asked the court “to open a preliminary investigation into Guaido as a result of diverse violent occurrences provoked in this country since January 22” – the day before Guaido named himself president.

Saab also accused Guaido of helping countries interfere in Venezuela’s internal matters.

As a legislator who also heads the National Assembly, Guaido has immunity from criminal investigation that can be removed only by the Supreme Court.

Minutes after the announcement, Guaido said he was not underestimating a threat of imprisonment but did not believe it was “anything new”.

“We are here, we will keep acting and working to confront the humanitarian crisis,” he told a news conference in Caracas.

Protests and turmoil 

The US, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Argentina, Peru, Ecuador and Paraguay have officially acknowledged Guaido as the legitimate interim head of Venezuela, while Russia, Iran, Turkey and China, among many other countries, back Maduro.

Inside Venezuela, Maduro holds the reins with the armed forces still loyal to him despite an opposition push to gain their support by proposing amnesty for anybody who supports Guaido’s transitional government.

Maduro has accused the US of leading an open coup against him to exploit Venezuela’s oil reserves, the largest in the world.

Some analysts agree with the government’s view. 

“[The White House is attempting to oust President Maduro for] the same reason there were some intents on ousting president Chavez in 2002 or Maduro in 2014,” Peter Dobson, a Venezuelan political analyst, told Al Jazeera. 

“One simple word: Oil. The control of the oil resources in Venezuela, as well as the diamonds, gold, water, gas and a whole range of natural resources, is massively important for the US, and [their] geostrategic interests across the world,” he added.

Last week, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo signed off on the order for Guaido to control holdings in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and federally insured banks, the State Department said.

On Monday, US President Donald Trump’s administration also announced sanctions against Venezuela’s state oil company PDVSA.

The move is expected to block $7bn in assets and result in $11bn of lost export revenue over the next year.

“If the only source of [foreign] income comes from PDVSA, with these new measures, the income will decline. This will imply that the supply of dollars will decrease and the demand will be maintained,” Carlos Eduardo Pina, a Venezuelan political scientist, told Al Jazeera.

“This will mean the exchange rate will increase a lot more, leading to inflation. If measures are not taken soon, inflation will continue to rise, generating a great discontent among the population,” Pina added. 

Meanwhile, Russian Deputy Finance Minister Sergei Storchak told Russian state news agencies that “there will probably be problems” for Venezuela in paying its debts.

Storchak said Venezuela owes Russia $3bn, with repayments twice a year of around $100m.

China has also loaned Venezuela more than $50bn through oil-for-loan agreements over the past decade, securing energy supplies for its fast-growing economy.

On Tuesday, China’s foreign ministry criticised the US sanctions.

“Experience has proven that external interference or sanctions will only complicate the situation and will not help solve practical problems,” foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said at a regular media briefing on Tuesday.

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Steyer: Howard Schultz isn’t ‘ready for prime time’


Tom Steyer

Tom Steyer suggested that Howard Schultz sit this election out, while also pointing to the threat of a third party candidate as more reason to aggressively pursue Trump’s impeachment. | AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall

Billionaire philanthropist and impeachment activist Tom Steyer on Tuesday panned the potential candidacy of former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz, telling reporters that the coffee mogul doesn’t seem “ready for prime time.”

Schultz said over the weekend that he is weighing an independent campaign for president, sparking an immediate and intense backlash from Democrats who argued that an independent candidate could reelect President Donald Trump by siphoning off anti-Trump voters from the Democratic nominee.

Story Continued Below

On Tuesday, Steyer suggested that Schultz sit this election out, while also pointing to the threat of a third party candidate as more reason to aggressively pursue Trump’s impeachment.

“For the people who are saying we should just wait until November of 2020 because they’re so sure they know what’s going to happen in November of 2020, think Howard Schultz’s announcement that he was considering running as an independent,” Steyer told a group of reporters, according to Business Insider. “It’s a stark reminder that there will be tons of events between now and November of 2020 that no one has predicted, that will change the facts on the ground, and that what we need to do is the right thing right now.”

Steyer made the remarks Tuesday at an event on Capitol Hill, where his group Need To Impeach launched a new lobbying blitz of key Democratic chairs in their push to begin impeachment proceedings in the House of Representatives. The billionaire environmentalist ruled out his own presidential bid earlier this month, opting instead to focus on his impeachment efforts.

Schultz has been making the media rounds this week to promote his new book, and as his potential candidacy heats up, he has faced criticism for his lack of concrete policy proposals and been hounded by those who insist that an independent run would offer him little chance at winning while splitting the anti-Trump vote.

The former Starbucks CEO insisted that his intention isn’t to get Trump reelected and has cast himself as a more palatable and centrist option for anti-Trump Republicans, especially if Democrats nominate a candidate from the party’s ideological left.

“I think Republicans are looking for a home. And if Republicans have a choice between a far-left, liberal Progressive candidate on the Democratic side or President Trump, President Trump is going to get reelected,” he said Tuesday morning on CBS.

Steyer on Tuesday dismissed arguments like those.

“Mr. Schultz has a right to his own opinions,” he said. “It doesn’t sound like he’s ready for prime time.”

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Starbucks barista shares video of a very good dog hilariously devouring a Puppuccino

Such whipped, much cream
Such whipped, much cream

Image: twitter 

2019%252f01%252f08%252f0f%252f20192f012f072f5a2fphoto.17e48.8aa97.jpg%252f90x90By Harry Hill

Yes, dogs enjoy Starbucks whipped cream. No, that doesn’t make them basic. 

Max, a dog, is Jodie Brooke’s favorite customer. The Starbucks barista posted a video on Monday of her feeding her canine friend a Puppuccino through the drive-thru window.

While a Puppuccino is just whipped cream, it’s pretty popular for dog owners that also love Starbucks. 

Multiple people responded with videos of their own chows chowing down on whipped cream, either in their own cup or off of their owner’s lids. 

No hands are necessary when a hungry snout is involved. 

Next time your pooch is on the prowl for a snack, look no further than the Starbucks drive-thru window. 

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Why Apple wants you spending more time in stores even if you’re not buying

Today at Apple sessions at the Apple Park Visitors Center.
Today at Apple sessions at the Apple Park Visitors Center.

Image: Brooks Kraft/Apple

2016%252f09%252f16%252f8f%252fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymde1lza3.c1888.jpg%252f90x90By Karissa Bell

Apple wants you spending more time in its stores. No, not at the Genius Bar getting your iPhone battery replaced, but actually hanging out long enough to (hopefully) learn something new. 

To help make that happen, the company today announced an expansion of its in-store educational programming, called “Today at Apple,” adding 50 new sessions to its lineup of free classes. 

The courses are built around specific subjects, like coding, photography, music, and video editing and are designed to appeal to a range of ages and skill levels. There are numerous “photo walk” sessions, which help teach mobile photography skills, for example, as well as “make your own emoji” art classes for younger kids. There are also coding classes and sessions on learning how to use your iPhone’s accessibility features.

Apple has been running “Today at Apple” for more than a year now, but the program has already become an important part of the company’s mission to turn its products and retail stores into a lifestyle. Apple’s retail chief, Angela Ahrendts, has said her goal is to turn the company’s physical stores into a kind of “town square.”

There are the obvious benefits: if you already buy Apple products, then classes like these can help you get more value out of the stuff you’re already buying — and increase the chance you remain a loyal customer in the future.

But it’s also aspirational. A young kid might get their first iPhone or iPad and have dreams about one day becoming a YouTube star or creating an iPhone app of their own. A few free classes at the local Apple Store might make those kinds of challenges seem less daunting. And because the classes are free and open to anyone (store employees will loan out iPhones and iPads if you don’t have your own), it helps Apple broaden its reach.

Younger Apple Store visitors have been especially receptive to “Today at Apple,” classes, according to Ahrendts.

“People are coming back, and the younger they are, the more frequently they’re coming back, which is interesting,” Ahrendts said, of the company’s earlier learnings from its in-store revamps. 

And that might be the most important point of all: At a time when the company is selling fewer iPhones than in years past, these programs ensure not just that stores are always full, but that ther’s always a reason to keep coming back.

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from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2B8GmLu
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