Why is China’s biggest technology company being targeted?

It has been called the crown jewel of the Chinese technology industry, but now one of its top executives has been arrested.

Meng Wanzhou, the chief financial officer of Huawei, was detained in Canada and the United States wants her to be extradited.

It comes as heightened economic tensions between the US and China seemed to be cooling – at least a little.

Last week, US President Donald Trump and China’s Xi Jinping held talks on the sidelines of the G20 summit. Washington agreed not to increase tariffs on January 1.

Meng was detained on the same day the two leaders met.

The US National Security Advisor John Bolton says he was aware in advance under what he calls a “law enforcement matter”.

Could Meng’s arrest worsen the US-China trade war?

Presenter: Peter Dobbie

Guests:

Ross Darrell Feingold – political analyst who advises multi-national corporations on political risk in Asia

Andrew Leung – international and independent China analyst

Scott Lucas – professor of American politics at the University of Birmingham

Source: Al Jazeera News

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The revolving door of Trump’s Cabinet: Who’s out next?

At least half a dozen Cabinet officials have either departed or are considered on the ropes following the midterm elections. For a president who has already shed or shuffled nine Cabinet officials, that would make for the highest turnover rate in recent history. Already in the last week, Attorney General Jeff Sessions was asked to resign and Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen is expected to follow at some point. Here’s the latest on where Trump’s agency heads stand.

Forced out

Appointed: Feb. 9, 2017


Departure: Nov. 7, 2018

Jeff Sessions

Attorney General

Replaced by Matthew Whitaker

Sessions resigned at Trump’s request the day after the midterm elections, ending a tumultuous tenure that saw the president regularly insult his attorney general over his decision to recuse himself from overseeing special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia probe. In Sessions’ place, Trump appointed the ousted DOJ head’s chief of staff, Matthew Whitaker, as acting attorney general. Since Whitaker has not recused himself from the Mueller investigation, he is now the special counsel’s new boss, despite concerns over critical comments he has made on cable news questioning the probe’s scope.

Read more: Sessions Ousted

Forced out

Appointed: Feb. 17, 2017


Departure: July 6, 2018

Scott Pruitt

EPA Administrator

Replaced by Andrew Wheeler

Trump grew tired of a torrent of negative stories about Pruitt’s misconduct, including spending over $105,000 on first-class flights, a $43,000 phone booth and spending millions of dollars on a round-the-clock, 20-person security detail. “Scott is a terrific guy,” Trump told reporters. “And he came to me and he said, ‘I have such great confidence in the administration. I don’t want to be a distraction.’ And I think Scott felt that he was a distraction.” A person close to the White House, however, said getting Pruitt out was one of chief of staff John Kelly’s top priorities.

Read more: How Scott Pruitt blew it

Disputed

Appointed: Feb. 14, 2017


Departure: March 28, 2018

David Shulkin

Secretary of Veteran Affairs

Replaced by Robert Wilkie

The White House said Shulkin resigned, but Shulkin’s public statements made it clear he was forced out. Trump initially nominated the presidential physician, Dr. Ronny Jackson, to replace Shulkin, before pulling the nomination over Jackson’s alleged misconduct including drinking on the job and improperly prescribing medication.

Read more: VA Secretary Shulkin out after months of struggle

Resigned

Appointed: Jan. 27, 2017


Departure: End of 2018

Nikki Haley

Ambassador to the United Nations

Replacement TBD

Republicans and the U.N. community were shocked when Haley announced her plans to quit. In her resignation letter, Haley warded off rumors that she was setting herself up to run against Trump in 2020, saying she would “surely not be a candidate for any office in 2020.” Former Fox News host and current State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert is seen as a leading candidate to replace Haley.

Read more: Nikki Haley to resign as Trump’s U.N. ambassador

Disputed

Appointed: Jan. 20, 2017


Departure: July 31, 2017

Reince Priebus

Chief of Staff

Priebus left after struggling for months to bring a sense of order to the West Wing and advance Trump’s legislative agenda. Then-Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly moved over to replace him, hopeful that he could better control people’s access to the president. During his time as chief of staff, aides said Priebus failed to form a strong bond with the president, and found it difficult to keep the White House focused.

Read more: Inside the end of the Priebus era

Shuffled

Appointed: January 20, 2017


Departure: July 31, 2017

John Kelly

Secretary of Homeland Security, now White House Chief of Staff

Replaced by Kirstjen Nielsen

Kelly’s departure has long been rumored, but in recent days,  The Washington Post and Wall Street Journal both reported that Kelly’s departure may again be imminent. Observers noted that at the White House’s election night gathering, Kelly steered clear of the president and his family. Kelly’s fate is widely seen as tied to that of Nielsen at DHS, as he pushed the president to appoint her.

Read more: How John Kelly became ‘chief in name only’

Shuffled

Appointed: January 2017


Departure: April 26, 2018

Mike Pompeo

CIA Director, now Secretary of State

Replaced by Gina Haspel

Pompeo quickly earned Trump’s trust as CIA director, often giving the president his morning intelligence briefing and aggressively defending him in public. Because of the bond the two men formed, Trump tapped Pompeo to serve as his secretary of State after firing Rex Tillerson.

Read more: No ‘deep state’ at State or CIA

Resigned

Appointed: February 10, 2017


Departure: September 29, 2017

Tom Price

Secretary of Health and Human Services

Replaced by Alex Azar

Price resigned in the face of multiple federal inquiries and growing criticism of his use of private and government planes for travel, at a cost to taxpayers of more than $1 million. His actions caused him to run afoul of Trump in part because they seemed to symbolize everything the president had inveighed against on the campaign trail by vowing to “drain the swamp.” Price was the first Cabinet secretary to step down.

Read more: Price resigns from HHS after facing fire for travel

Rumored

Appointed: Feb. 28, 2017


Departure: TBD

Wilbur Ross

Secretary of Commerce

Administration officials and close White House advisers say the 80-year-old Ross could be out of a job as soon as January or as late as mid-2019. Ross, who has long been rumored to be on thin ice with Trump, denies it. “I’ll serve as long as the president wants and I have no indication to the contrary,” he told an audience at a Yahoo Finance event on Nov. 13.

Read more: Wilbur Ross leaving? Mulvaney is waiting.

Rumored

Appointed: March 1, 2017


Departure: TBD

Ryan Zinke

Secretary of the Interior

People close to Zinke said he has made it known he plans to resign his position by the end of the year, pressured by concerns over investigations into possible ethics violations. Zinke has apparently been exploring potential roles with Fox News, the energy industry and other businesses, according to people knowledgeable about the discussions.

Read more: Zinke prepares to leave Trump’s Cabinet

Rumored

Appointed: Dec. 6, 2017


Departure: TBD

Kirstjen Nielsen

Secretary of Homeland Security

According to a senior White House official, the president has been itching to fire Nielsen for months over what he views as her weak leadership on border security, along with other enforcement policies that he has sought to implement. Trump has told aides he wants an agency chief who will fervently defend his hard-line approach to illegal immigration, particularly with an incoming House Democratic majority that has promised to thwart his agenda at every turn.

Read more: Trump considers tough-talking former ICE director for DHS chief

All photos by the Associated Press | Development by Beatrice Jin

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5 Ways To Clean a Computer Keyboard

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DeepMind’s AlphaZero is an AI neural-net-infused chess master

Checkmate.

Competitive and casual chess players alike now have a new foe. In addition to computers, there’s a new AI platform called AlphaZero that can totally beat us all.

SEE ALSO: An AI wrote the script for this movie, and let’s just say there’s eyeball vomiting in it

AlphaZero is from DeepMind Technologies, a subsidiary under Alphabet, which is Google’s parent company. It can tackle not only chess, but also shogi and Go — two equally difficult, if not even more challenging, games. 

AlphaZero comes after many years of research, succeeding AlphaGo Zero from last year, the world’s best Go player. But this time around there wasn’t any human help. AlphaZero taught itself how to play from scratch. 

The neural-net AI studied each of the three games, using a process that’s similar to how a brain is structured. (Neural nets are similar in some ways to neurons in our bodies: It’s essentially the way the computer takes info and works through it, sort of like a very complex equation.) AlphaZero trained for 9 hours on chess, 12 hours on shogi, and 13 days on Go. Playing itself, it thought about the same moves over and over again. And it worked.

The sheer hardware of the AlphaZero is intense (think a Mac Pro on steroids). It used 5,000 tensor processing units, or TPUs, in training alone. These processors are for AI and neural net tasks. Google Photos employs them for AI features within the app. 

All of this shows how advanced computers are becoming. With neural net AI inside, decision-making abilities aren’t far off. 

Saying AlphaZero did well would be an understatement.

Saying AlphaZero did well would be an understatement.

Image: deepmind technologies

AlphaZero wiped out the competition, including previous iterations of DeepMind’s AIs. It beat Stockfish in chess, Elmo in shogi, and AlphaGo Zero in Go. Its AI backbone and algorithms worked in real time. Pre-planning for every possible move, after training against itself, let it handle whatever the competition played. 

Just 21 years ago, IBM’s Deep Blue was able to beat Garry Kasparov, the world chess champion at the time. This was a supercomputer in every way, with a massive set of processing power for the time frame. In a short amount of time, the tech has advanced a lot.

I’m looking to the future to see what happens next… who knows, it might be able to beat me at Monopoly. 

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Rockets News: Eric Gordon Says “I’m Just Not Having Fun…This Sucks”

Houston Rockets guard Eric Gordon pauses on the court during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Brooklyn Nets, Friday, Nov. 2, 2018, in New York. The Rockets won 119-111. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

Mary Altaffer/Associated Press

The Houston Rockets enjoyed a 65-win season that saw them come within one game of the NBA Finals in 2017-18, but as they have struggled to the tune of an 11-13 start this season, there’s a different vibe around the team.

“I’m just not having fun man,” Houston guard Eric Gordon told The Athletic’s Kelly Iko after Thursday night’s 118-91 loss to the Utah Jazz. “I’m just not. This sucks. Even the times where I have good games. We’re just not using some guys the right way. Are we gonna make the right sacrifices? Do we have the right attitude?”

It wasn’t that long ago that the Rockets won 8-2 over a 10-game stretch, thanks in large part to a five-game winning streak. However, they have followed that up by losing six of eight, including the last two. As a result, they currently sit in 13th place in the Western Conference.

Houston already has four multiple-game skids, already surpassing last season’s total of three. Not only that, but the Rockets have already had to endure a pair of four-game losing streaks, something last year’s squad dealt with only once.

The inability to shake off rough performances is what makes this group different from last season’s.

“Last year was the best year I’ve ever had being a part of a team,” Gordon added, per Iko. “We just never had a bad moment. If we ever had a bad game as a team, you knew the next game we would blow somebody out. It didn’t matter who it was.”

It’s difficult for teams not named the Golden State Warriors to maintain that level of success on a year to year basis. Especially when there is roster turnover. This past offseason, Houston lost both Trevor Ariza and Luc Mbah a Moute in free agency. Meanwhile, the Carmelo Anthony signing fizzled out after just 10 games.

Not to mention the fact that Chris Paul missed two games as the result of an October rumble with the Los Angeles Lakers and James Harden missed three games with a hamstring injury.

Add all of that up and it’s easy to see why the Rockets have come out of the gates slow.

Gordon is also likely frustrated by his numbers being down nearly across the board. His 15.9 points per game would be his lowest since 2015-16, and his field-goal percentage (36.5), three-point percentage (31.1) and assists (1.8) are all the lowest of his career.

It’s only the first week of December, so there’s still plenty of time for Gordon and Houston to get their season on track. In order to do that, though, Gordon believes he and his teammates should take notes from the 2017-18 Rockets, a squad that ranked second in the league in scoring.

“Look how they’re playing, that’s how we used to play,” Gordon told Iko. “Sharing the ball, getting up and down and attacking. We’re not doing that anymore.”

Houston will have its first opportunity to try to regain its old form on Saturday when it hits the road for a Texas showdown against the Dallas Mavericks.  

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On the cliff-edge: Dover faces prospect of no-deal Brexit chaos

Dover, United Kingdom – The port in Dover, Britain’s gateway to Europe, is doing a roaring trade as usual.

A procession of trucks – an estimated 10,000 of them pass through the south-easterly town every day – disembark from ferries and move quickly onwards towards their eventual destinations.

But this could all be about to change – efficiency at Dover, which handles about 17 percent of all UK trade in goods worldwide, threatens to give way to gridlock.

The UK’s imminent departure from the European Union has prompted both local and national concern for the town’s future.

In particular, the prospect of a no-deal Brexit is raising alarms.

“We have to look at the worst-case scenario,” says 73-year-old resident and local councillor, Nigel Collor.

“Dover is very much on a knife-edge.”

Fears over no-deal disruption

A no-deal Brexit would see the United Kingdom go crashing out of the EU on March 29 next year – almost three years after it voted to leave the bloc – with no agreement on either the terms of its withdrawal or future trading relations.

In Dover, which relies on seamless trade arrangements with Britain’s EU partners, the threat of such a departure is palpable.

“This town processes around 10,000 trucks a day, in and out of the port,” says Collor.

“If there are any delays whatsoever to that movement, it could be hugely detrimental.”

The UK voted to leave the EU in a June 2016 referendum, with 52 percent in favour of exiting the bloc [David Child/ Al Jazeera]

About 99 percent of the trucks passing through the sprawling Dover port each day originate in the EU, according to government statistics, with the bloc’s single market rules allowing virtually frictionless trade.

It takes roughly two minutes for the authorities to clear trucks carrying goods to and from the EU, for example.

But a no-deal Brexit may end such efficiency, forcing instead cumbersome customs checks and time-consuming regulatory barriers.

And that delay could prove to be costly.

‘Our motto: keep Dover moving’

Government estimates say an additional two-minute hold-up per freight vehicle in Dover’s port may cause tailbacks stretching up to 27km.

Gridlock on that scale could have dire and wide-ranging consequences.

“Our motto is to keep Dover moving … but you have to look at it sensibly. There could be people stuck while trying to get to shops, schools and hospitals,” Collor says. 

Nigel Collor worked at Dover port for decades prior to becoming a councillor [David Child/ Al Jazeera]

His fears don’t appear to be without foundation.

Kent County Council, the regional authority, has suggested that traffic problems spawned by a no-deal Brexit could create a series of grim knock-on effects, including disruption to waste collection services and the transportation of dead bodies to post-mortem or storage facilities.

UK Finance Minister Philip Hammond, meanwhile, has warned it could take at least two years to get Dover’s infrastructure ready for a no-deal scenario.

A Brexit bellwether

But if Dover is a bellwether case for possible outcomes of a no-deal Brexit, it is certainly not the only part of the UK that is projected to be negatively affected by such a divorce. 

In fact, according to official estimates, the entire country would be worse off. 

The Bank of England, the UK’s central bank, has warned that leaving the EU without a withdrawal agreement could cause the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) to shrink by up to eight percent.

The government, meanwhile, forecasts a potential economic slump of more than nine percent in a no-deal scenario.

The International Monetary Fund, for its part, says leaving the EU in a disorderly fashion would have “substantial costs for the UK economy”.

UK’s finance minister has warned it could take at least two years to get Dover ready for a no-deal Brexit scenario [David Child/ Al Jazeera]

Experts say such bleak predictions are accurate and would play out alongside capital flight, widespread business closures and heightened unemployment. 

“The impact of a no-deal Brexit would be very severe. The EU is the UK’s main trading partner,” Professor Aditya Goenka, chair in economics at the University of Birmingham, says.

If we look at the impact it could have on GDP within the UK … this is equivalent to the entire northwest, including the cities of Manchester and Liverpool, just shutting down,” he adds.

This could be worse economically for the UK than the global financial crisis [of 2008]. 

Accusations of fearmongering

Others, however, argue that the warnings issued about no-deal’s impact on Dover and other parts of the UK amount to little more than blatant fearmongering designed to derail the entire Brexit process.

Debbie Lane, the 59-year-old owner of a local pub, is one.

“Why would there be backlogs? Before we joined the EU, when we had customs and imports and exports clerks, things worked,” Lane says.

“No-deal is better than a deal where we are held to ransom by the EU again, which I do feel we have been. Locally, we don’t benefit from the EU. Everyone just comes and goes straight through this town. Nobody stops here.”

Since joining the European Economic Community in 1973, Britain has intertwined itself with its European partners into a single market, which allows people, goods, services and money to move freely within the bloc in return for adherence to common rules and regulations.

But critics such as Lane argue that has meant ceding too much sovereignty to the EU. Like her, many Dover residents feel aggrieved by Brussels’ perceived influence and want out of its orbit.

During the UK’s June 2016 referendum, more than 62 percent of the area’s voters opted to get out of the EU, 10 percent higher than the overall leave vote nationwide.

Debbie Lane (pictured) says fears over Dover’s post-Brexit future are exaggerated [David Child/ Al Jazeera]

It isn’t just a section of the local community casting aspersions over warnings about Dover’s future should the UK fully sever ties with the EU, however.

Julian Jessop, chief economist at the UK-based Institute of Economic Affairs think-tank, has suggested that threats of “substantial disruption” at the town’s port in the event of a no-deal Brexit are “exaggerated”.

Jessop says it is unlikely that most trucks arriving from the EU would straightaway be subject to the same checks as those from countries outside of the bloc for three reasons.

Firstly, because laws don’t necessarily demand so; secondly, UK and European authorities would pursue mutually beneficial economic cooperation; and finally, there would be a lack of manpower to carry out inspections on such a scale.

‘Uneasiness over the unknown’

Disputes over how Dover would fare in the event of a no-deal departure from the EU form just one part of the wider Brexit discussions dominating public and political life in the UK.

British Prime Minister Theresa May’s proposed withdrawal deal, brokered after months of negotiations with EU leaders, has attracted vociferous criticism from across the political spectrum.

PM Theresa May faces a parliamentary showdown over her proposed Brexit deal [File: Dylan Martinez/Reuters]

If approved by the UK parliament in a crucial vote next week, the withdrawal agreement would end uncertainty over a possible no-deal departure.

But the deal is likely to be roundly rejected, thereby continuing the uncertainty of the shape of the UK’s future relationship with the EU.

In Dover, that unpredictability means more anxiety for Collor.

“There is an uneasiness over the unknown … Dover is going to get hit, somehow, it’s just a matter of how we control the flow of traffic to keep the town going,” he says.

“We only want to know what’s going to happen. You can’t plan if you don’t know what you’re planning against.”

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We ranked how tough the new ‘Super Smash Bros. Ultimate’ fighters are

There are 11 brand new fighters in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate and almost all of them kicked my ass.

As I spent dozens of hours playing Ultimate in the last week, I unlocked tons of new fighters, including all of the new additions to the game from Chrom to Simon. Some of them gave me a really hard time in our one-on-one duels, and some of them infuriated me as they blasted my fighters off the stage time and time again.

SEE ALSO: ‘Super Smash Bros. Ultimate’ is exceptional in every way

Of course some of them were pretty easy. I am, after all, a lifelong Smash player and have the capacity to beat bots on a first attempt. But a surprising number of newcomers forced me into a second round.

This is by no means a power ranking of new Smash fighters. No. This is personal.

11. Ken

Ken isn't even that good at fighting.

Ken isn’t even that good at fighting.

Image: nintendo

I beat Ken so easily it was honestly embarrassing for him. This Street Fighter legend came at me with basically nothing and I wiped the floor with him. I felt bad. I didn’t even take more than like 20% in damage. For someone who has spent his whole life doing martial arts, he sure didn’t put up much of a fight.

10. Isabelle

She did her best.

She did her best.

Image: nintendo

Oh Isabelle, when I saw you were going to be participating in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate I was excited. But then when I faced you one-on-one on the Animal Crossing stage and punched you so hard you exploded off-screen I felt bad. Isabelle’s attacks involve trying to rope in opponents with a fishing poll and growing a tree in hopes of chopping it down onto people. She was easy to beat and I didn’t feel great doing it.

9. Richter

If he would've come before Simon he could've been so much harder.

If he would’ve come before Simon he could’ve been so much harder.

Image: nintendo

Richter, the echo fighter of Simon from Castlevania, appeared to me after I had already faced and beaten Simon, so I knew all of his moves. He was tough, sure, but it wasn’t too difficult to dodge his projectiles and go in for the kill. Richter put up a valiant effort. 

8. Inkling

The paint is disorienting.

The paint is disorienting.

Image: nintendo

Inklings come from the family friendly world of Splatoon where the name of the game is to cover up stuff in paint. This translates very well into Smash, and I found myself immediately covered in fluorescent, bright paint. The Inklings moves were hard to for me to pin down, and to be honest it was a much closer fight than I would’ve liked, considering I was playing as one of my favorite fighters, Samus. Good game, Inkling.

7. King K. Rool

His gun hurts pretty bad.

His gun hurts pretty bad.

Image: nintendo

Now we’re getting into the really tough matchups. King K. Rool is not an easy fighter to take down. In my first round against King K. Rool, the fight was not even close. He blasted me out of the stage by reflecting one of my attacks with his down-B move. My next match up against K. Rool was too close for comfort, but I beat that gross green lizard fair and square. 

6. Chrom

My handsome son.

My handsome son.

Image: nintendo

My first fight against Chrom hurt because I was playing as Roy, who is basically the same fighter as Chrom. I got my ass handed to me, and I barely got a hit in. It was a match up of two swordsman and this bot defeated me easily, which was particularly tough because I had about 24 hours of playtime under my belt, so it’s not like I was still warming up. I came back for round two with Dark Samus, and was getting destroyed all the way up to about 80% before I shifted my strategy and went full-on ranged attacks. I tore him in half with a fully charged neutral-B blast.

5. Ridley

Ridley the extraterrestrial dragon packs a punch.

Ridley the extraterrestrial dragon packs a punch.

Image: nintendo

Ridley was an early new challenger in my experience with Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, one of the first new fighters I came across, and I wanted him bad. I fought Ridley using Link, and Ridley literally wiped the floor with me. One of his moves is grabbing you and sliding you across the ground. Ridley tossed me into the lavas of Norfair and KO’d me before I ever got a good hit on him. It felt bad. I went at Ridley again and lost again. I was mad, I’ll admit, but I cooled off and got a handle on everything, coming back with Link again to blast Ridley away.

4. Daisy

Daisy doesn't mess around.

Daisy doesn’t mess around.

Image: nintendo

I’ve always loved playing as Peach, so getting Daisy felt important. I came at her with Lucina, thinking that some aggressive sword action would take care of her quickly. I was so wrong. She hip-slammed me into oblivion. Young Link was up next, and unfortunately I couldn’t get the job done thanks to Daisy’s counter-attack where she throws Toad up like a human shield. Finally I got her with Samus, and then I celebrated by playing as Daisy for about an hour. Take that, princess.

3. Simon

Simon's whips hurt so bad.

Simon’s whips hurt so bad.

Image: nintendo

Simon came out swinging in Dracula’s Castle, and I had no idea how to fight back. His whips were longer than I expected. His axes hit harder than I expected. He ended the first fight against me so quickly I thought there was no way I would unlock him. I felt that again as I lost to Simon once more, barely getting a hit in. Third time was the charm, I guess, as I killed him with a final smash move.

2. Dark Samus

Dark Samus is the cooler, edgier version of Samus,

Dark Samus is the cooler, edgier version of Samus,

Image: nintendo

I love playing as Samus, and I really wanted to play as Dark Samus in Ultimate. In fact, I was playing as Diddy Kong, and despite knowing the ins and outs of Samus’s mechanics, I was decimated. She kicked me around, blew me up, and launched my monkey ass to death. I tried again as Samus, my main. I died as Samus against Dark Samus. I was humiliated. I think I almost cried. The next 10-15 minutes between round two and round three were filled with fury. I came back against Dark Samus with anger and I destroyed her with Bowser. I butt-slammed her so hard she evaporated off the side of the screen.

1. Incineroar

This is what peak performance looks like.

This is what peak performance looks like.

Image: nintendo

Incineroar was the most challenging fighter I encountered in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. With most fights I understood where I went wrong when I lost. With Incineroar, I was just getting trounced and there was nothing I could do. I was playing as Corrin in our first encounter, a character I don’t really understand and frankly don’t care for. Incineroar came prepared with moves that baffled me and grapples that destroyed me. I came back for round two with Young Link, to put a little range between us, but this beefy feline once again slammed me so hard I flew out of the boxing ring and into my death. For round three I handed off the controller to my girlfriend who tried with Shiek, but she too got wrestled into a KO. I tried agin. I just couldn’t get any good damage on him. In round five I finally did it, I wrecked Incineroar (barely) with Dark Samus. I did it. It felt great to destroy that cat. It took about an hour to finish off, but I did it. 

Eat it, Incineroar.

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Google to personalize audio-based news over assistant software

Image: lili sams/mashable

Michael Kan

for

PCMag

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Listening to the news over a Google Home smart speaker is going to get more useful. On Thursday, Google announced a new effort to personalize the audio news feed available through the company’s digital assistant software.

The goal behind the project is to create a radio station that caters to your interests, Google product manager Liz Gannes said in a blog post. It’ll also be smart enough to avoid repeating the same new stories you’ve already heard during the day.

The company’s AI-powered algorithms on Google News can already personalize text-based articles for you by looking at what topics you like to read and your search history. Now the tech giant is bringing some of the same technologies to the audio realm.

The company partnered with over a dozen media outlets — including the Associated Press, The Hollywood Reporter and USA Today — to create a prototype that uses Google Assistant to deliver the personalized audio content.

“This new experience will bring you an audio news playlist assembled in that moment, for you,” Gannes said. “It starts with a briefing of top stories and updates on topics you care about, and extends into longer-form content that dives deeper into more stories.”

Google Assistant will also be ready with updated audio news when you access it again throughout the day, whether it be during your commute home or on a jog, she added.

Google’s voice assistant can already deliver audio stories when you ask it to play the news. However, the content is usually taken from television or radio casts. So to improve the experience, Google created new guidelines on how media publishers should create audio stories specifically for its voice assistant software.

As result, expect the new audio experience to deliver shorter and punchier content, with less intro music, and for now, no ads. Google’s guidelines also recommend that media publishers keep their short-format stories around 50 seconds long. Medium-format stories, on the other hand, can last from 2 to 15 minutes.

The company is launching the revamped audio news function to a limited number of Google Assistant users in the US before a wider roll out. For now, it’s only available in English. The company is also inviting interested media publishers to join the project.

    This article originally published at PCMag
    here

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    Carmelo Anthony Rumors: Lakers ‘Have No Interest’; LeBron Hasn’t Spoken to Magic

    FILE - In this Nov. 2, 2018, file photo, Houston Rockets forward Carmelo Anthony reacts during the second half of the team's NBA basketball game against the Brooklyn Nets in New York. The Rockets won 119-111. The addition of Anthony to the Rockets’ roster produced more thorns than fruit and now he is out. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer, File)

    Mary Altaffer/Associated Press

    The Los Angeles Lakers reportedly have no interest in signing veteran free agent Carmelo Anthony.

    According to Brad Turner of the Los Angeles Times, Melo’s representatives reached out to the Lakers, but LeBron James has not spoken with team president Magic Johnson or general manager Rob Pelinka about signing Anthony.

    This is despite the fact that James and Anthony are close personal friends.

    The Athletic’s Joe Vardon reported Thursday that LeBron does have interest in playing alongside Melo due to his belief that he could help the Lakers’ young roster.

    An anonymous executive spoke with Vardon and said they don’t believe there is much of a market for Anthony.

    That executive also said Magic should “fight” LeBron on the idea of signing Melo if James does indeed lobby to do so.

    The 34-year-old Anthony was traded by the Oklahoma City Thunder to the Atlanta Hawks during the offseason, and he then signed with the Houston Rockets after getting waived.

    Melo appeared in just 10 games for the Rockets this season before they parted ways with him as well.

    Anthony averaged a career-low 13.4 points per game with Houston, while shooting 40.5 percent from the field and 32.8 percent from three-point range.

    Melo seemingly struggled to adjust to a bench role after starting for the first 15 years of his NBA career.

    Anthony spent parts of seven seasons with the New York Knicks and averaged 24.7 points per game during his tenure there, but his production dropped off considerably with the Thunder last season to the tune of 16.2 points per game.

    With James leading the way, the Lakers are fifth in the Western Conference at 15-9, and they trail the first-place Denver Nuggets by just two games.

    Adding a 10-time All-Star in Anthony to the team may look like a good idea on paper, but it may be ill-advised for the Lakers to shake things up significantly given the fact that they are trending toward their first playoff appearance since 2012-13.  

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    Coinbase homepage ad reveals the sad state of the crypto market

    Bitcoin price isn't doing well today. Or this month. Or this year.
    Bitcoin price isn’t doing well today. Or this month. Or this year.

    Image: Ulrich Baumgarten via Getty Images

    2016%2f09%2f16%2f6f%2fhttpsd2mhye01h4nj2n.cloudfront.netmediazgkymdezlza1.53aeaBy Stan Schroeder

    If you bought a lot Bitcoin in 2011, you’d be rich now. 

    But if you bought Bitcoin a year ago, or even a month ago…well, let’s just say your portfolio would be a pretty sad sight. 

    Which is why it’s funny that cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase still has this chart on its webpage. 

    Ouch.

    Ouch.

    Image: Coinbase

    The chart, featured quite prominently on Coinbase’s site and noticed recently by Dogecoin creator Jackson Palmer, tracks the performance of an imaginary $100 investment in Coinbase Bundle, a sort of fund that tracks the prices of the top 5 cryptocurrencies by market cap, listed on Coinbase: Bitcoin, Ethereum, Bitcoin Cash, Litecoin and Ethereum Classic. 

    SEE ALSO: Crypto’s black Wednesday: Where do we go from here?

    Unfortunately, not one of these coins performed very well in the last week, month or year. 

    You could, however, set the chart to “all,” which starts the timeline at Jan. 4, 2013, and turns the imaginary $100 into $12,530.18. But Coinbase Bundle launched in September, so there was no way to buy into it in 2013. 

    In any case, kudos to Coinbase for still having the courage to keep that chart online. 

    As for Palmer, his comments from January, at the height of the crypto bubble, feel prescient now that the prices have plummeted. 

    “While it’s great to see mainstream enthusiasm for cryptocurrency, I think the high valuations and inflated market caps serve more to distract from the real goal of these projects than anything,”  he wrote at the time. “My one hope is that when that does happen and people lose large sums of money, the negativity in the market doesn’t stifle technological innovation or interest in digital currency from the mainstream.”

    Disclosure: The author of this text owns, or has recently owned, a number of cryptocurrencies, including BTC and ETH. 

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