Danny Ainge: LeBron James May Be Taking ‘Donald Trump Approach’ with GOAT Remark

BOSTON, MA - FEBRUARY 14:  Boston Celtics General Manager Danny Ainge looks on before action between the Boston Celtics and the LA Clippers at TD Garden on February 14, 2018 in Boston, Massachusetts. 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 Omar Rawlings/Getty Images)

Omar Rawlings/Getty Images

LeBron James recently said that he felt winning a title with the Cleveland Cavaliers and beating the 73-win Golden State Warriors to do so made him the greatest player in NBA history. 

UNINTERRUPTED @uninterrupted

What @kingjames considers being the GOAT 🐐

New episode of More Than An Athlete out on @espn+. https://t.co/7XSQ2GpOVo

And Boston Celtics president of basketball operations, Danny Ainge, was surprised by the comments.

“His career’s not over,” Ainge said during an interview on 98.5 The Sports Hub’s Toucher & Rich show (h/t Darren Hartwell of NBC Sports).” “I’d just like to—why he’s saying that, I don’t know. Maybe he thinks that that sells. Maybe he’s taking the Donald Trump approach and trying to sell himself. I don’t know.”

The implication by Ainge seems to be that James was making a controversial remark to drum up interest for his More Than An Athlete show on ESPN+, which is being produced by ESPN and James’ UNINTERRUPTED.

It’s unlikely that James will appreciate being compared to Trump, however, given how publicly critical he’s been of the President and his policies. 

James, at least, can make a credible argument for being great, having won three titles and four MVPs and being voted to 14 All-Star Games and 14 All-NBA first teams. Nobody’s questioning that James actually handles his business.

But his comments did continue the never-ending GOAT debate between James and Michael Jordan. The argument for James has always been his ability to impact the game in all facets as both an elite scorer and facilitator, his incredible longevity and durability and the fact that he led the Cavaliers past a Warriors team that set an NBA record for most regular-season wins.

The argument for Jordan is that he won six titles in six trips to the NBA Finals, is arguably the most cold-blooded scorer and clutch finisher in league history and was also an elite defensive player. 

Ainge acknowledged that James at least belongs in the GOAT discussion.

“Obviously LeBron is in every conversation with who is the greatest player of all time,” he said. “But time will tell. I don’t know if anyone knows who the greatest of all time is, because the years are so different.”

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Report: Oregon’s Bol Bol Has Stress Fracture in Foot; Likely Out for Season

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - NOVEMBER 16: Bol Bol #1 of the Oregon Ducks reacts to a call in the second half against the Syracuse Orange during the 2K Empire Classic at Madison Square Garden on November 16, 2018 in New York City.The Oregon Ducks defeated the Syracuse Orange 80-65. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)

Elsa/Getty Images

Oregon star Bol Bol may not play again this season due to lingering issues with a foot injury that has already caused him to miss the past four games. 

Per 247Sports’ Matt Prehm, one source said Bol’s injury is a stress fracture and his recovery timetable would keep him out for the remainder of the regular season and, if Oregon advances, NCAA tournament.

Prehm added Bol is “likely” to start rehabbing his injury with outside doctors and trainers before the 2019 NBA draft.

Oregon head coach Dana Altman’s most recent update on Bol’s injury came on Dec. 27. He told reporters the freshman star “continues to get evaluated.”

If Bol doesn’t return to Oregon, he’s expected to be one of the top picks in this year’s NBA draft. B/R’s Jonathan Wasserman has the seven-footer going No. 6 overall to the Washington Wizards in his most recent mock draft. 

Bol hasn’t played since Dec. 12 against San Diego when he scored 20 points and grabbed nine rebounds in 33 minutes. The 19-year-old leads the Ducks with 21 points and 9.6 rebounds per game and a 52 percent success rate from three-point range. 

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US intensifies bombing in Syria after Trump announced withdrawal

After President Donald Trump announced the withdrawal of 2,000 troops from Syria last month, the US military ramped up its bombing campaign against territory still held by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group in the eastern part of the country, according to sources on the ground and photographs obtained in a joint investigation by Al Jazeera and The Intercept.

The fiercest attacks in the past week occurred in Al Kashmah, a village on the Euphrates River near the border with Iraq, according to three sources in eastern Syria. Amid US air attacks and artillery fire by the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), civilians and family members of ISIL fighters fled to villages to the south, the sources said. While Al Kashmah has not yet fallen, the only people remaining there are fighters representing what has become the front line of the war against ISIL in Deir Az Zor province.

The ISIL fighters are clustered in villages along the Euphrates, from the border with Iraq to south of Hajin, a former ISIL stronghold that fell to the SDF, a Kurdish-led militia, in mid-December.

There are about 50,000 to 60,000 people who remain in those areas, according to a civilian activist in Deir Az Zor who documents rights abuses and asked not to be named due to safety concerns. “The civilians in these areas have no place to go or hide from the US bombardment of their villages,” the activist said, noting that the residents have been harmed at the hands of the Syrian government, the US, and ISIL alike.

Bombing of hospital

The ISIL-held villages along the Euphrates have been the targets of US bombing sorties since November as part of Operation Roundup. In addition to military targets, Operation Roundup bombed civilian areas, including a hospital, The Intercept and Al Jazeera reported last month.

The US could not attack the hospital without warning it first — and without giving the hospital a reasonable amount of time to either stop ISIS from using it or to evacuate civilian personnel and wounded.

Kevin Jon Heller, professor of international law

A senior ISIL fighter said the al Yarmouk Hospital was the region’s last public health facility that treated civilians in the area. He also acknowledged that ISIL might have used it to treat its fighters if treatment was not available in its own field hospitals.

Kevin Jon Heller, an international law scholar, told Al Jazeera that the US could not legally attack the hospital simply because it believes some ISIL fighters were there.

“The US could not attack the hospital without warning it first — and without giving the hospital a reasonable amount of time to either stop ISIL from using it or to evacuate civilian personnel and wounded,” said Heller, a professor of international law at Australia National University and the University of Amsterdam

Heller said the bombing of a hospital in a combat zone without considering the civilian casualties or warning them is a fundamental violation of International Humanitarian law (IHL), a component of international law that regulates the conduct of war and the protection of civilians.

Fighters and civilians in the villages have reportedly been describing the US bombing campaign as a scorched-earth policy, using an Arabic term that translates to “burn the ground” [Zoe Garbarino/US Army Photo/AP Photo]

Trump’s abrupt December 19 decision to withdraw US ground troops involved in the fight against ISIL in Syria took even the US Defense Department by surprise. Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, the president declined to give a timeline for the pullout, and said instead that it would happen “over a period of time.” The increased intensity of the bombings, however, belie claims by Trump and others that ISIL has been defeated or that the US war in Syria, which has largely been carried out from the skies, is over. It remains unclear whether US air attacks will continue once the troops leave.

During the final days of 2018, the US campaign bombed villages up and down the Euphrates, focusing primarily on Al Kashmah. On the night of New Year’s Eve, the bombs relentlessly assaulted Al Kashmah, leaving the village largely destroyed by the next morning, according to an ISIL fighter who was there. (We interviewed members of ISIL and the SDF, as well as a tribal leader, for this article via messaging services, and we’ve granted them anonymity because they all stand to be targeted by the various warring factions for speaking to journalists.)

The coalition against ISIL appears to be targeting internet cafes, according to two sources on the ground. Internet cafes in the villages are used by civilians and ISIL fighters alike. They are not part of ISIL’s tactical communications infrastructure, according to sources, but the fighters typically use them to communicate with the outside world, especially their families in other countries.

“They just like to disrupt and mess everything up,” an ISIL fighter said in an interview. “They bombed the places where they sell gasoline for the motor, or they sell cooking oil, or where they filter the water – they bomb all these places. Not just the net, they bomb everything just to make your life horrible.”

The aftermath of the US bombing campaign in Al Kashmah, from where civilians have fled due to relentless attacks [Courtesy: The Intercept]

The risk of civilian casualties from bombings in Deir Az Zor is high because the rural villages have become densely populated with the families of ISIL fighters and civilians fleeing in recent months from more densely populated cities and towns that have fallen to Kurdish-led forces. “No building is empty here,” the ISIL fighter said, referring to the remaining ISIL-controlled villages in Deir Az Zor. Fighters and civilians in the villages have reportedly been describing the US bombing campaign as a scorched-earth policy, using an Arabic term that translates to “burn the ground”.

On Sunday, the US military admitted that it’s killed 1,139 civilians in Iraq and Syria since the start of its campaign against ISIL in 2014. That number is significantly smaller than the estimates of civilian casualties put out by monitoring groups, like Airwars, which says between 7,308 and 11,629 civilians have been killed.

In response to a list of questions about the bombings in Syria, Danielle Covington, a spokesperson for US Department of Defense, said the coalition dictates “the pace of our strikes against ISIS targets deliberately and with careful consideration of their impact to civilians. The increase in strikes in late December were selected specifically to degrade ISIS capabilities and were unrelated to any other variable.” 

Following Trump’s withdrawal announcement, the Kurds, who lead the on-the-ground forces that had partnered with the US in fighting ISIL in Syria, reached out to President Bashar al-Assad of Syria for protection. Feeling betrayed by the US, the Kurds are concerned about a possible attack by Turkey, which has long feared that its own minority Kurdish population might be emboldened by the existence of a Kurdish state or autonomous region south of Turkey. (In March 2018, Turkish Armed Forces and allied militia seized control of the Syrian city of Afrin from the Kurds.)

In addition, after the evacuation of civilians from Al Kashmah, ISIL negotiated a three-day ceasefire with the Kurds, according to three sources on the ground. On Monday, seven trucks carrying food and humanitarian aid entered ISIL-controlled areas under the agreement, according to one ISIL and one SDF source. The ceasefire was initially scheduled to end December 31, but ISIL officials are discussing a possible six-month extension, according to an ISIL fighter familiar with the talks but who is not directly part of the effort. During the temporary ceasefire, some ISIL fighters and defectors fled Deir Az Zor to other parts of Syria, according to two sources who made such journeys themselves.

A lasting ceasefire would allow badly-needed supplies to reach civilians in the villages, and ISIL would also use it to regroup. The Kurds would receive a safeguard from a two-front war if the Turks attack.

A ceasefire between ISIL and the Kurds, coupled with the Syrian government’s potential protection of the Kurds from Turkey, would largely undercut part of Trump’s public rationale for withdrawing US troops from Syria. In a tweet, Trump described how Turkey could “easily take care of whatever remains” of ISIL. In a subsequent tweet, Trump spoke of his conversation with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey:

President @RT_Erdogan of Turkey has very strongly informed me that he will eradicate whatever is left of ISIS in Syria….and he is a man who can do it plus, Turkey is right “next door.” Our troops are coming home!

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) December 24, 2018

But the prospect of Turkey’s completion of a clean-up job against ISIL in Syria seems increasingly unlikely given the rapidly shifting alliances there.

Meanwhile, the US military continues to drop bombs on Deir Az Zor, despite the fact that the Kurds, expected to be abandoned by the US, are not currently engaging ISIL fighters.

“They’ve backstabbed all their allies and they’re killing the people here, and eventually the Islamic State will survive and spread or it will fall,” the ISIL fighter said, referring to the US. “But there will be people here who will remember what happened here, and they will carry on this information and it will spread throughout the Middle East.”

 Follow Ali Younes on Twitter: @ali_reports

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Dems celebrate with Pelosi poised to win speakership


Nancy Pelosi

Nancy Pelosi will be the first person in six decades to regain the speaker’s gavel after losing it, a job she first held from 2007-2011. | POLITICO illustration/ AP and Getty images

Congress

The longtime Democratic leader is expected to win the gavel handily after previously dispatching a rebellion in her ranks.

Nancy Pelosi was poised to be elected speaker for the 116th Congress on Thursday, cementing her legacy and returning the longtime Democratic leader to the post she first held eight years ago.

Pelosi, the first and only woman to ever wield the speaker’s gavel, was celebrated in the leadup to the vote, which will make her the most prominent Democratic foil to President Donald Trump at a time when the new House majority is eager to take on the president.

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“Let me be clear. House Democrats are down with NDP,” House Democratic Caucus Chairman Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) said as he officially nominated Pelosi, whose maiden name is D’Alesandro, to the speakership. The Democratic side of the chamber erupted into a standing ovation.

The election will mark a triumphant return to the gavel for the California Democrat after a band of a dozen-plus rebels unsuccessfully tried to deny her the speakership late last year. Pelosi will be the first person in six decades to regain the speaker’s gavel after losing it, a job she first held from 2007-2011.

Pelosi, 78, will also make history in a less positive way — ascending to the speakership in the middle of a partial government shutdown with no end in sight.

Still, even with the shadow of the shutdown looming over the new Congress, current and incoming lawmakers still exuded that “first day of school” vibe before the official proceedings kicked off shortly after noon.

Several lawmakers were seen toting their young children around the House as they welcomed new members and said hello to longtime colleagues. Pelosi entered the chamber with several of her grandchildren in tow, pumping her fists as she walked down the center aisle of the chamber.

Legendary crooner Tony Bennett, a guest of Pelosi’s, was spotted in the speaker’s box in the gallery above the chamber. Other guests of Pelosi’s included Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser, Mickey Hart of the Grateful Dead and Project Runway co-host Tim Gunn. Pelosi’s husband, five children and all nine grandchildren were also on hand for the occasion.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), a former House member himself, was also on hand for the speaker’s vote and gave Pelosi a hug as the vote kicked off.

Several new members were still trying to find their way around the Capitol complex and introduce themselves to the police officers who station every entrance.

Rep.-elect Haley Stevens (D-Mich.), one of 100 incoming freshmen, was stopped by security as she tried to get to the House to be sworn in. She didn’t yet have a member pin, only a pass. The officer, who did not recognize her, looked at her name on the badge and muttered “bear with me here.”

It did not put a dent in her excitement to become a member of Congress. “We are energized and we are resolved and we are ready to deliver,” Stevens said enthusiastically as she turned toward the chamber.

The differences between the Republican and Democratic side of the House were clear.

The GOP, which saw a significant decrease in the number of Republican women after the 2018 election, was represented mainly by white men in dark suits. The Democratic side, meanwhile, welcomed a historic number of female members, many of them clad in bright pops of pink, purple, green and red.

Wyoming GOP Rep. Liz Cheney, in her nominating speech for House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), implored lawmakers to “build the wall,” prompting a standing ovation from GOP lawmakers.

Under the vote for speaker, after lawmakers‘ names are called, they stand up and say who they are supporting for the job. The vote is expected to take at least an hour.

The roll call vote in many ways will echo Pelosi’s history-making election more than a decade ago. As in 2007, Pelosi was expected to be surrounded by her grandchildren as she clutched the gavel for the first time on Thursday afternoon. And she again will be flanked by the same two deputies who served under her in the majority last time — Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) and Majority Whip Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.).

But Pelosi also has a clock ticking on her power after cutting a deal with Democratic rebels in December to clinch the votes she needed to become speaker.

As part of the deal, Pelosi agreed to limit herself to two more terms at most. And if she decides to run for speaker in 2020, she must receive the backing of two-thirds of the caucus, a higher threshold than the simple majority she had to clear this time.

On her way to the chamber, holding her daughters’ hands, her husband in toe, Rep.-elect Abigail Spanberger appeared to be ready to vote against Pelosi on the House floor. While the Virginia Democrat from a conservative district wouldn’t say who she planned to back for speaker, she vowed to stay “consistent” with her promise to oppose Pelosi for the job.

Rep. Kurt Schrader (D-Ore.), walking to the chamber with his wife, said he also was prepared to oppose Pelosi. Schrader tried to convince Pelosi critics to hang together in their opposition. And he was upset when they crumpled for the promise that she will leave after a maximum four years.

“That’s going to be too late,” Schrader said. “We need a new face of the party now, reflecting the change in this country. Younger leadership… Unfortunately I’m very worried that Democrats will lose the majority or are in danger with her at the helm — nothing against her personally. We desperately need a new face of the Democratic Party.“

Even with her critics, nearly every member of the Democratic Caucus boisterously supported her nomination to the speakership and the excitement was palpable in the chamber.

Still, Pelosi also faces a raft of challenges that didn’t exist the last time she was speaker. Trump, unlike the last Republican president she served with, is wildly unpredictable, often upending his own White House’s strategy with a single tweet.

“It’s going to really be up to [Trump],” said Rep. Lois Frankel (D-Fla.) on what, if anything, gets accomplished between the new Democratic House and the president. “The speaker, she is of the mindset to try to get things done. We’re not here just to look good, even though I think we will.”

Pelosi will also have to corral a boisterous Democratic Caucus, including a large freshmen class brimming with progressives looking to push an aggressive left-leaning agenda and moderates who won Trump districts they hope to hold onto in the next election.

“This is what she has trained for, to be in the majority and have an opportunity to hold this president accountable. And to use her skillset to also try to move progressive legislation,” said Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-Va.). “I would never underestimate Nancy Pelosi’s ability to do both of those things and do them well.”

Later Thursday, House Democrats are expected to pass a two-part plan to reopen the government. But the proposal, which includes no new money for the border wall, has already been rejected by Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.).

Pelosi, along with other congressional leaders, has been invited to meet with Trump on Friday in another bid to try to end the nearly two-week stalemate. But Democrats and Republicans remain dug in over Trump’s wall. And Pelosi, emboldened by a new Democratic majority, has repeatedly ruled out giving Trump more money for it.

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Blueface Is One Of 2019’s Most Promising Stars — His Producer Tells Us How He Got Here



WorldStarHipHop

By Trey Alston

Blueface makes punchline-packed music that’s simultaneously bubbly and morose. There’s a gritty feel to its composition, frequently involving the hyperactive, sensational melodies that make California hip-hop the stuff to vibe to in the club. The 21-year-old Los Angeles rapper and Cash Money West signee has quickly carved out his own space in the field with an offbeat flow that sounds like he’s chasing a train that he just keeps missing. Because of it, he became the viral star to close out the end of 2018, and one to watch rise in the new year. And alongside him is Laudiano — the producer behind the beats for “Respect My Crypn” and “Studio,” two of Blueface’s most important songs — whose proximity gives him insight into the rapper’s rapid rise.

Also based out of L.A., Laudiano has been making beats for two years and has worked with the likes of Drakeo the Ruler, Stunna Girl, and Shoreline Mafia. His connection with Blueface came organically. “I contacted him after I saw his video for ‘Deadlocs,’” Laudiano told MTV News. “I sent him some beats and he emailed me back saying he fucked with them. He shot a video of himself in his car rapping to them and we went from there.”

Laudiano entered into Blueface’s world, where unorthodox flows and energetic rhymes are the norm. Blueface is, as West Coast legend Ice Cube noted, “an acquired taste.” For every fan that he attracted early on, he pissed off two more who felt that he was making a mockery of rap. But Laudiano has created the perfect atmosphere for this off-kilter style.

When you look at the results, it’s no wonder the pair has established their camaraderie. Blueface released two mixtapes in 2018, Famous Cryp in June, and Two Coccy in September. “Respect My Crypn” appeared on Famous Cryp and outshined the other standouts “Next Big Thing” and “Thotiana” — two tracks that became popular because of meme-able video moments. Laudiano’s beat — an excessively vibrant, fluid thing with a sticky bass drum — plays a large part in the song’s continued success, blending well with Blueface’s signature style, which Laudiano defines as “smooth player and kind of aggressive.”

“When he hops on my beats, I feel like we got our own drip, like we are LeBron James and Dwyane Wade,” he says.

Even Laudiano admits that, if you blink, you’ll miss Blueface’s rise. “The craziest thing has just been how fast everything has happened,” Laudiano says. “Getting a record on the radio was my goal. Power 106 and L.A. Leakers spun ‘Respect My Crypn’ early and it blew my mind.” Since then, everyone wants to capture Blueface’s lightning in a bottle. He exchanged direct messages with Drake on Instagram, with the latter seeming to angle for a collab. In December, Blueface also revealed that he’s been in the studio with Quavo. And then, there are the memes — the mop, the pants, Blueface’s signature fingertip-lick, eyebrow split shtick — the true measures of viral power and reach. Laudiano’s favorite is the one of Blueface’s Crip walk being dubbed over random songs.

Their latest collaboration is the sensual track “Studio.” When Blueface first dropped the snippet in November, it was an indication of a bold new direction. Laudiano’s latest beat challenged Blueface, finding an iciness that didn’t exist in “Respect My Crypn.” The collaboration came about via an Instagram message from Dnyce of League of Starz, a production duo credited for work with Chris Brown, T.I., and 2 Chainz.

“[Dnyce] hit me on Instagram and said we should work,” Laudiano says. “The next day, I made the beat and sent it over to Dnyce to finish it. Shortly after Blueface released the video for ‘Respect My Crypn’ and I wanted to keep the train rolling so I sent him a pack with that beat in it.” Blueface let the success of his hit simmer before surprising the world with the snippet of the new song. “A month later, I seen that video of him singing to the beat, with my beat tag playing in the background,” Laudiano says. “He hit me saying that it was going to be a hit and I agreed.” After being posted on December 14, the official video for the song now has over 4 million views on YouTube, and 1.9 million more on WorldStarHipHop.

Blueface’s ascent looks to continue well into 2019. It’s much too early to talk about his inevitable studio debut, and Laudiano is quiet about it as well, but ready: “I’ve got to be a part of it because ‘Respect My Crypn’ became his biggest song, with ‘Studio’ becoming his fastest growing single thus far,” he says. It’s hard to believe that, just a couple of months ago, Blueface was another hopeful emcee, but Laudiano’s a key that unlocked potential to be explored in the new year. “We just have been going up,” the producer says. “Our songs started on SoundCloud and now, look, we’re on the radio and WorldStar.”

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In a world first, a Chinese spacecraft has just landed on the far side of the moon

Https%3a%2f%2fblueprint api production.s3.amazonaws.com%2fuploads%2fvideo uploaders%2fdistribution thumb%2fimage%2f90109%2f8714c0ff 5bb0 43f1 870c e09cf1a26170

Maria Dermentzi

The China National Space Administration (CNSA) managed to successfully land the lunar probe Chang’e-4 on the far side of the moon. This remarkable accomplishment marks the first time in history that a spacecraft is touching down on the part of the moon that is not visible from Earth.

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7 tech trends to watch at CES 2019

This past year was challenging for the tech world, to say the least, but the new year brings an opportunity to change the conversation. A huge opportunity, actually — CES 2019, the world’s largest tech show, is right around the corner.

CES (which used to stand for “consumer electronics show” but is now its own term) certainly has its share of overhyped gadgets, meaningless concepts, and just plain dumb ideas, but the overall vibe tends to be optimistic. Tech can solve problems, and the whole industry descends upon the Las Vegas Strip to tell their stories for a few days in January.

SEE ALSO: Snoozers are losers: Everything you need to know about the button we love to hate

We’re also on the cusp of at least one major technological shift — the transition to 5G networks — that has consequences for the entire tech industry, adding to the weight of what’s already pretty weighty show. At the same time, incremental advances are adding up in areas like the smart home and consumer health tech to push forward meaningful advances that aren’t just hype.

What are the biggest trends that CES 2019 will be known for? Read on.

1. 5G gets real

Image: Miquel Llop/NurPhoto/Getty Images

Well, “real.” To be sure, 5G is already here (Verizon and AT&T both have — extremely limited — active networks), but we’re still weeks if not months away from smartphones that can take advantage of them. And even when those phones arrive, the transition isn’t as simple as turning on a 5G modem.

Nonetheless, 2019 is poised to become the Year of 5G, and they hype train begins at CES, at least as far as consumers are concerned. If all goes well, CES 2019 will show the world what 5G will do for us besides just giving us faster smartphones. More secure smart-home devices, battery-operated remote sensors, and reliable tele-health apps are all good answers to that question, but seeing is believing.

2. Google builds momentum in the smart home

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Image: DAVID MCNEW/AFP/Getty Images

Last year Google made a big splash at CES, telling the world its Home speakers and Google Assistant were a huge focus for the company, and that it had what it took to go toe-to-toe with Alexa.

It worked. According to industry stats from Canalys and others, Google has all but closed the gap with Amazon in sales of smart speakers. It still has work to do, though: Alexa had a long head start, the platform has way more skills (70,000+), and Amazon’s assistant is a massive presence on third-party devices (Alexa famously came to microwaves and the Big Billy Bass in the fall).

That’s probably why Google is tripling the amount of floorspace for its presence at CES 2019. Amazon, oddly, has never had an official booth at CES, so Google has a wide-open opportunity to fill the vacuum by hyping its Assistant, which has been making big strides this year with services like Duplex and Call Screen. The big question will come after CES, though: Will Google be able to turn its CES presence into market momentum?

3. TVs go to 8K

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Image: Xinhua/Liu Dawei/Getty Images

TV technology hasn’t necessarily peaked, but it’s more or less stagnated the past couple of years. The industry has settled, for the time being on OLED and LCD (aka LED) panels, and 4K and HDR tech are pretty much standard. Smart TVs, always a hot topic at CES, are still a mess of irrelevance since the TV is always secondary to the sticks, dongles, and boxes we connect to them, and creating smarts where it counts (by, say, inventing a TV that knows to turn off the “soap opera effect”) remains out of reach.

One thing that consumers will always understand, though, is more pixels. And that’s why we’re going to hear a lot about 8K at CES 2019. Let’s be real: A TV with 7,680 x 4,320 resolution is a visual absurdity — there’s no way you’d come close to seeing individual pixels at anything resembling a normal viewing distance.

Nonetheless, 8K will come eventually (we have to get to those Total Recall wall TVs somehow), but the content pipeline is just catching up to 4K, so CES 2019 will be remembered for incremental progress with the (admittedly impressive) panels, but not much more.

4. Health tech > fitness tech

Image: Neil Godwin/T3 Magazine/Getty ImageS

Step counters and smartwatches used to be all over CES. Not so much anymore. Yes, the fitness-wearable market has pretty much shaken out, but all that sensor and “smart” technology has evolved to fuel a bigger, broader health-tech category that goes well beyond wearables.

Sleep technology, for example, encompasses everything from mattresses to white noise devices to dedicated sleep wearables. Air purifiers are embracing smart tech and new form factors to convince more people to make them part of their lives. Technology for improving your health is changing from specialized medical devices for specific conditions to consumer lifestyle products everyone can benefit from, one category at a time.

5. Laptops get more compact and start to leave Intel behind

Image: Raymond Wong/Mashable

The days of people thinking tablets and phones were “laptop killers” are way behind us, and the category continues to find ways to evolve. Biometrics like fingerprints and facial recognition are more common and form factors look to shrink even more as more companies introduce designs with ultra-thin bezels and start to move from full-size USB ports to USB-C.

Something else laptops will start to move away from at CES 2019: Intel and x86 chip architecture. Qualcomm’s 8cx chip, introduced in December, will likely begin appearing in real products at the show, which will also bring with it more laptops with native LTE connectivity. It all portends a greater shift toward ARM-based chips among laptops, with Apple expected to debut a MacBook with a mobile chip sometime in 2020.

6. Self-driving cars get a support network

Image: Getty Images/iStockphoto

CES has become a showcase for self-driving technology, but the progress with the core technology tends to be incremental: slightly better LiDAR, smaller circuit boards, algorithms that create a smoother ride. The more interesting conversation being had now is about everything outside the car that will be affected by the transition to self-driving.

Fueled by 5G, vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V), vehicle-to-infrastructure (V2I), and vehicle-to-everything (V2X) communication systems are getting more real by the day, and there’s renewed focus on how self-driving cars will disrupt categories like delivery vehicles and even tractors. And it’s not just cars any more: a flotilla of air-taxi companies will descend on Vegas determined to become players in the nascent industry of self-flying passenger drones.

7. AR grows by going niche

Image: Jarvish

Augmented reality gets a bad rap. Pokemon Go has fizzled, you never use the Measure app on your iPhone, and it doesn’t help that VR has been (mostly) a bust. AR, however, has been a growing presence thanks to its usefulness in some key areas: car/helmet heads-up-displays (HUDs), enterprise smart glasses, and AR-guided healthcare systems are all going to be big at CES 2019. AR might not be your everyday yet, but baby steps.

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Shutdown lurches into 13th day with no end in sight


The Capitol Building

President Trump said after Wednesday’s unsuccessful meeting that he is “ready and willing to work with Democrats to pass a bill that secures our borders.” | Zach Gibson/Getty Images

Government Shutdown

The White House and Democrats remain at an impasse as Nancy Pelosi prepares to take the speakership.

Washington is experiencing a massive shake-up on Thursday as Democrats take over the House and Republicans beef up their Senate majority. But one thing is showing no signs of change: A government shutdown dragging into its 13th day.

Speaker-to-be Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) is set to pass a package of government funding bills on Thursday afternoon aimed at reopening the quarter of the government that’s closed and shirking President Donald Trump’s border wall. But Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) says he won’t take up the proposals — or anything at all without Trump’s approval.

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A government shutdown has never in recent history dragged on from one Congress to another, but like so many things under Trump’s presidency this conflict is one without precedent.

The sharp impasse comes after a bipartisan meeting with the president on Wednesday aimed to restarting moribund negotiations. But Trump dismissed Pelosi’s plan and said he would look “foolish” for reopening government departments unrelated to the immigration dispute, leaving the new divided Congress opening in a state of remarkable gridlock.

“We want the president to open up the government. We are giving him a Republican path to do that, why would he not do it?” Pelosi implored the president after the meeting.

But McConnell raised the prospect that the shutdown could drag on for “weeks” and dismissed Pelosi’s bill as political theater, even though Senate Republicans supported a stopgap bill with no increase in wall funding as recently as December. The GOP has deemed the House bill a stunt given the lack of presidential support.

“Will these new Democrats come to Washington ready to roll up their sleeves, work together and make laws? Or are they going to waste time on partisan show votes that will do nothing to move the country forward?” McConnell said on Wednesday night. “Let me make this perfectly clear: The Senate will not waste its time considering a Democrat bill which cannot pass this chamber and which the president will not sign.”

With the two top congressional leaders already feuding, the sides have at least tentatively agreed to continue talking. Members of Congress have been invited to another meeting at the White House on Friday, and the president said after Wednesday’s unsuccessful meeting that he is “ready and willing to work with Democrats to pass a bill that secures our borders.”

But Trump launched a new attack on Democrats on Thursday as the new House majority prepared to be sworn in, blaming the impasse on their political ambitions even though Trump once said he’d be “proud” to take the blame for the shutdown.

“The Shutdown is only because of the 2020 Presidential Election. The Democrats know they can’t win based on all of the achievements of “Trump,” so they are going all out on the desperately needed Wall and Border Security – and Presidential Harassment. For them, strictly politics!” Trump posted in Twitter on Thursday.

Republicans have surmised that Pelosi may be more willing to deal with Trump after winning her speakership election on Thursday, yet Democrats seem to have little interest in ceding ground to the president. Some liberals are urging the Democratic leaders to give Trump no money for a border barrier, and Schumer and Pelosi have settled at $1.3 billion for fencing, which means no increase from current funding levels.

“If the Republicans and Trump want to reject that, then the ball is in their court to come up with something they think would fly. There is no appetite on the Democratic side of the aisle to fund a wall that is symbolic at best and largely political for his base,” said Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-Va.).

The president is moving in another direction, panning a compromise that Vice President Mike Pence floated to Schumer of about half the $5 billion that the president has been seeking. Trump is still advocating for the $5.6 billion in funding passed by the Republican House in the lame duck, a piece of legislation which officially dies at noon Thursday when the House GOP majority fades away.

Heather Caygle contributed to this report.

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Xiaomi turns Redmi into a sub-brand

Xiaomi’s Redmi brand is taking on a life of its own. 

The company is spinning off Redmi, which was previously a product line for the company’s mid-range phones, into a sub-brand, Android Authority reported Thursday.

Xiaomi also posted a teaser image on its website featuring the number 4,800, which indicates that the first Redmi phone will have a 48-megapixel camera — or a 4,800mAh battery. 

SEE ALSO: Xiaomi’s next phone might have a 48-megapixel camera

Xiaomi has been teasing a phone with a 48-megapixel camera for some time, so it’s quite likely that this upcoming Redmi device will have one. It’s rumored that the device will have Qualcomm’s new Snapdragon 675 chip, which fits into the Redmi profile. Redmi phones are typically mid-range devices which offer a ton of bang for the buck. 

As for the new sub-brand strategy, it appears that Xiaomi is taking a page out of Huawei’s playbook. The Chinese smartphone giant has been very successful with its Honor sub-brand, which offers phones slightly less powerful than similar Huawei-branded models for significantly lower prices. 

It’s worth noting, however, that Xiaomi already has one sub-brand — the India-focused Poco, whose Pocophone F1 was one of the best phones of the year. One has to wonder just how many sub-brands can one smartphone brand have. 

More about the Redmi sub-brand and, likely, the new smartphone, will be revealed at a January 10 press event. 

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RED teases Hydrogen One ‘Lithium’ 3D camera attachment

What is RED doing?!
What is RED doing?!

Image: raymond wong/mashable

2017%2f10%2f24%2f21%2fraymondwong3profile.34d72By Raymond Wong

We all wanted RED’s Hydrogen One to be great. Instead, it turned out to be the arguably the worst tech product of 2018

Even the biggest RED fans like YouTuber Marques Brownlee (better known as “MKBKD”) had to declare the Android phone the “bust of the year.” 

But despite its disappointment, RED’s still charging forward with the phone in 2019, starting with a 3D camera attachment called Lithium.

SEE ALSO: RED’s Hydrogen One was the worst tech product of 2018

RED teased the Lithium 3D camera attachment on Facebook with only a “Big things in the works for next year. Lithium” caption. 

Per Engadget, the 3D camera is made by LucidCam, a company that already makes 360-degree cameras designed for VR, and uses the Hydrogen One as a camera and controller.

Lithium is not to be confused with any of RED’s promised modular components, which will connect to the magnetic pogo contacts on the rear of the phone like Moto Mods do on some Motorola phones.

As you can see in the image of the rather monstrous (it’s large for a phone, but compact compared to cinema-quality 3D cameras) Lithium, the attachment looks it connects to the Hydrogen One with metal claws.

<img alt="Why not just build a 3D camera with the Hydrogen One built in?" class="" data-caption="Why not just build a 3D camera with the Hydrogen One built in?" data-credit-name="RED” data-credit-provider=”custom type” data-fragment=”m!fbd5″ data-image=”http://bit.ly/2GTeAbs; data-micro=”1″ src=”https://i.amz.mshcdn.com/Gu1oniIS8ArG2XIu_b9UMcJQL9w=/fit-in/1200×9600/https%3A%2F%2Fblueprint-api-production.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fuploads%2Fcard%2Fimage%2F911510%2F58f18852-c9e3-400d-8158-47e0ca83f2aa.jpg&#8221; title=”Why not just build a 3D camera with the Hydrogen One built in?”>

Why not just build a 3D camera with the Hydrogen One built in?

Image: RED

A smaller cinema-grade 3D camera would be great for filmmakers…if 3D wasn’t on the sharp decline.

In 2017, revenue for 3D ticket sales in the U.S. and Canada fell 18 percent according to the Motion Picture Association of America.

You don’t need to be overly observant to notice 3D, once heralded as the next major immersive experience for movies, hasn’t caught on.

Besides the obvious fact that most 3D movies really suck compared to their 2D counterpart, tech companies have largely abandoned 3D as format consumers remotely care about.

Nobody makes 3D phones anymore and Nintendo has greatly de-emphasized the 3D in many of its games for the Nintendo 3DS

Tech companies have largely abandoned 3D.

Similarly, even TV makers, once the largest proponents of 3D, have stopped marketing 3D as a marquee feature. Hell, most newer TVs don’t even come with 3D. Instead, TV makers are focusing their efforts on 4K and 8K resolution, HDR video image quality, and improving display quality with technologies such as OLED and MicroLED.

James Cameron might be the only person who’s still living in a bubble where he strongly believes 3D still stands a chance at winning over consumers. But like, where the heck is Avatar 2? It’s been perpetually “coming” for the last 10 years and has yet to arrive. 

With so many knocks against 3D, I don’t think it’s premature to say RED is blinded by its own personal ambitions. I’m not saying there’s no chance filmmakers won’t be impressed by the Lithium camera, but its odds aren’t looking good.

Like all RED devices, the 3D camera will no doubt be expensive. So a really expensive attachment for an overpriced phone to shoot in RED’s 4-View (H4V) “holographic” format that can only be viewed on RED Hydrogen One phones… how does that make any sense?

Fine, maybe the 4-View videos can be adapted to be viewed in 3D in theaters, but then it’s basically admitting the 4-View format is nothing more than 3D. Do you see where this is all going? 

Perhaps I’m completely wrong and the Lithium camera and the Hydrogen One are such niche products that us mere regular content creators just don’t understand their genius. I wish RED the best of luck. I’ll stick with my iPhone until I’m proven wrong.

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