Thursday

Largest asteroid in a century to whiz by Earth on Sept 1


MIAMI, United States — The largest asteroid in more than a century will whiz safely past Earth on September 1 at a safe but unusually close distance of about 4.4 million miles (7 million kilometers), Nasa said.

The asteroid was discovered in 1981, and is named Florence after the famed 19th century founder of modern nursing, Florence Nightingale.

“Florence is the largest asteroid to pass this close to our planet since the first near-Earth asteroid was discovered over a century ago,” said a US space agency statement.

It is one of the biggest asteroids in the Earth’s vicinity, and measures about 2.7 miles (4.4 kilometers) wide — or about the size of 30 Egyptian pyramids stuck together.

“While many known asteroids have passed by closer to Earth than Florence will on September 1, all of those were estimated to be smaller,” said Paul Chodas, manager of Nasa’s Center for Near-Earth Object Studies.

Scientists plan to study the asteroid up close when it passes, using ground-based radar imaging in California and Puerto Rico.

“The resulting radar images will show the real size of Florence and also could reveal surface details as small as about 30 feet (10 meters),” said Nasa.

This pass will be Florence’s closest “since 1890 and the closest it will ever be until after 2500,” added the US space agency.

Asteroids are small, natural rocky bodies that orbit the Sun.

Large asteroid collisions with Earth are rare.

A car-sized asteroid hits Earth’s atmosphere about once a year and burns up before reaching the surface.

“About every 2,000 years or so, a meteoroid the size of a football field hits Earth and causes significant damage to the area,” said Nasa.

“Finally, only once every few million years, an object large enough to threaten Earth’s civilization comes along.”

Scientists are confident that Florence will not be one of them. CBB

source: technology.inquirer.net

Wednesday

Starbucks online store closing, items on sale up to 50% off


Starbucks’ online store is heading for the great big trash bin in cyberspace, so everything is now on sale at up to half price off.

Cups, mugs, coffee presses and other premium items now have their prices cut and will be available until supplies last, or up until the deadline.

According to Business Insider, October 1 will be the last day for the Starbucks online store. Once taken offline, Starbucks merchandise will be sold through third-party sellers such as Amazon.

Consumable products will also continue to be available through groceries and similar establishments.

The company is said to be reallocating their efforts into making physical stores as go-to places for customers.

“We’re continuing to invest in amplifying Starbucks as a must-visit destination and are looking across our portfolio to make disciplined, thoughtful decisions,” Starbucks spokesperson Maggie Jantzen said.

They are also hard at work on integrating mobile transactions into their business model. Thirty percent of orders in the United States alone were reported to have been made through mobile payments.

Furthermore, Starbucks is looking at partnering with more digital companies to extend their customer reach. Alfred Bayle/JB

source: business.inquirer.net

Dengue-fighting mosquitoes released in Brazil


RIO DE JANEIRO—Brazilian scientists on Tuesday began to unleash the first of millions of mosquitoes infected with a bacteria meant to prevent the insects from transmitting the dengue virus to humans.

Thousands of Aedes aegypti mosquitoes carrying the bacteria were released in front of journalists by scientists from the Fiocruz institute in Rio de Janeiro.

The hope is that they will then breed and spread the bacteria, denting the insect population’s ability to spread dengue and other viruses including Zika and chikungunya.

Scientists have been preparing the project — developed by Australians who first put the Wolbachia bacteria into mosquitoes — since last year.

Dengue causes fevers, rashes, nausea and in some cases can be fatal, while Zika has been blamed for serious birth defects.

In 2016, fears over Zika led to the United Nations health body to declare an international health emergency, ending in November.

Fiocruz plans to release 1.6 million infected mosquitoes a week, later stepping that up to three million.

“We found that when an Aedes aegypti mosquito has this (bacteria), it blocks or reduces the capacity of the mosquito to transmit viruses like dengue, Zika and chikungunya,” said the head of the dengue program at Fiocruz, Luciano Moreiro.

“So the idea is that when they are released, they will transmit this, as if they were immunizing the other mosquitoes and therefore transmission will be reduced.”

source: technology.inquirer.net

Tuesday

Mesothelioma Clinical Trial Tests New Immunotherapy Treatment


An exciting new mesothelioma clinical trial was just announced by the National Cancer Institute. The trial, which starts November 3, 2017 and runs for three years, will test a combination of traditional mesothelioma treatments and mesothelioma immunotherapy. This mesothelioma clinical trial is exciting for two reasons. First, it will test atezolizumab (sold under the brand name Tecentriq), an immunotherapy drug that has been approved for non-small cell lung cancer but is not yet approved for pleural mesothelioma. Second, it will test a different treatment protocol for some common mesothelioma treatments.

This mesothelioma clinical trial (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03228537)  reflects a tactic that’s becoming increasingly common in mesothelioma treatment. It might be called the “throw everything you’ve got at it” approach. Doctors and researchers are finding that combination treatments extend life expectancy for mesothelioma patients. This study appears designed to find more and better ways to use all the weapons in the cancer treatment arsenal to keep pleural mesothelioma from progressing.

This mesothelioma clinical trial has the potential to pave the way for new and better mesothelioma treatment options. This is welcome news for those who get to participate in the trial and for mesothelioma patients everywhere, who will benefit from the results.

New Mesothelioma Clinical Trial Includes Tecentriq

According to the ClinicalTrials.gov listing, the trial will study “Atezolizumab, Pemetrexed Disodium, Cisplatin, and Surgery With or Without Radiation Therapy in Treating Patients With Stage I-III Pleural Malignant Mesothelioma.” There will be no masking, which means that there will be no control group. The trial is to find better treatment options, and all participants will be given the full treatment.


Here is a breakdown of the treatments in this study:
 
  • Atezolizumab is an immunotherapy drug marketed under the trade name Tecentriq
  • Pemetrexed Disodium (also referred to as pemetrexed and sold under the trade name Alimta) is the most common chemotherapy drug given to mesothelioma patients
  • Cisplatin is a platinum chemotherapy drug, which is often given in combination with other chemotherapy treatments, such as pemetrexed
  • The surgery in the study will be either an extrapleural pneumonectomy (EPP) or pleurectomy decortication (P/D), the two most common surgeries for pleural mesothelioma
  • Some patients will also receive radiation

    Chemotherapy combined with surgery is considered the standard of care for mesothelioma patients. Radiation is a common mesothelioma treatment as well.

    Multimodal Mesothelioma Treatment

    Doctors have found that mesothelioma patients do much better when they receive at least two types of treatment. This combined approach is called multimodal mesothelioma treatment.


    The most effective mesothelioma treatment combination is surgery plus chemotherapy. For more advanced patients (Stage IV and sometimes Stage III), surgery is not an option. Some patients may have other ailments that make them too weak to withstand surgery. For these mesothelioma patients, chemotherapy and radiation may provide the best relief.

    Increasingly, immunotherapy has become part of multimodal mesothelioma treatment. Immunotherapy is most often used as a second-line treatment. This means that patients are given immunotherapy drugs after more conventional treatments stopped working.

    Mesothelioma clinical trial NCT03228537 takes the multimodal approach to a new level, combining all the standard mesothelioma treatments and adding experimental immunotherapy. One of the unusual aspects of this mesothelioma clinical trial is that all three drugs (two chemotherapy drugs and one immunotherapy drug) are given at the same time.

    Neoadjuvant Treatment

    Mesothelioma chemotherapy and immunotherapy are usually adjuvant treatments. Adjuvant treatments are given after another treatment. Chemotherapy and immunotherapy are usually adjuvant to mesothelioma surgery.

    This study turns the normal order on its head, using immunotherapy and chemotherapy before surgery, to reduce the size of the tumor. Pre-treatments like this are called neoadjuvant treatments.


    The trial will follow up with adjuvant radiation and more Tecentriq immunotherapy after surgery.

    Mesothelioma Immunotherapy

    There are several immunotherapy drugs on the market. Immunotherapy drug Keytruda has shown promise for mesothelioma patients. Tecentriq is still in the experimental phase for mesothelioma, but patients and researchers have high hopes that it will be an effective treatment for some mesothelioma patients.

    Tecentriq is a monoclonal antibody that blocks cancer cells from using a particular mechanism (the PD-L1 pathway) to down-regulate your body’s immune response. It is one of a class of immunotherapy drugs (along with Keytruda) called checkpoint blockers.

    What Is a Mesothelioma Clinical Trial?

    When a treatment is lab-tested, the next step is a clinical trial using human subjects. Most clinical trials have three or more phases. If the first phase is successful, the research will advance to phase II. If not, the trial may be abandoned. With each new phase, a mesothelioma clinical trial will include a larger group of patients.

    Trial NCT03228537 is a phase I pilot. Though several components of this treatment study are known to work well for mesothelioma patients, the protocol is untested, as is the immunotherapy drug Tecentriq. Because this is a phase I mesothelioma clinical trial, the number of participants will be small.

    Mesothelioma patients often seek out clinical trials. While you are enrolled, you receive the best possible treatment. Researchers closely monitor your condition, so they can catch changes early. Plus, you have the chance to receive cutting-edge mesothelioma therapy. If a new treatment is successful, it could become the standard of care in the future – and you will be one of the first mesothelioma patients to benefit.

    When you enroll in a clinical trial, the researchers hope that you will stay enrolled until the trial is complete. However, you are free to drop out at any time. If the treatment becomes too much for you to tolerate, the physicians overseeing the study will work with you to alleviate any side effects and will stop treatment, if necessary.

    Am I Eligible for this Mesothelioma Clinical Trial?

    Mesothelioma clinical trial NCT03228537 will study 28 patients. It is based in Portland, Oregon.


    You must meet certain requirements to participate. Visit the website for a full list. Here are some of the requirements:

  • You must be a Stage I-III pleural mesothelioma patient with no peritoneal spread.
  • You must have a resectable (able to be removed through surgery) tumor.
  • Your mesothelioma cell type must be epithelioid or biphasic (not sarcomatoid).
  • You must not have had mesothelioma immunotherapy or chemotherapy treatment before the study.
  • You must meet certain health requirements and undergo specific tests. 

    If you are interested in participating in this mesothelioma clinical trial, speak with your physician about whether it’s a good fit for you. If you have questions specific to the trial, you can contact the trial recruiter, Anne S. Tsao, at 713-792-3245.

    This is just one of a number of mesothelioma clinical trials in the United States. Let your doctor know, if you are interested in being part of a clinical trial. Visit ClinicalTrials.gov  and watch this website for our launch of clinical trial information to find out about other upcoming studies.

    source:  mesotheliomacircle.org

Williams wins at US Open to stay in No. 1 hunt; Konta out


NEW YORK — Venus Williams stayed in the crowded hunt for the No. 1 ranking — even though she had no idea that she has a shot at that spot.


Johanna Konta, a Wimbledon semifinalist just last month, dropped out of that chase with a first-round exit as the U.S. Open got started Monday.

The No. 9-seeded Williams overcame a mid-match lapse to pick up a 6-3, 3-6, 6-2 victory in Arthur Ashe Stadium against Viktoria Kuzmova of Slovakia, a 19-year-old qualifier who is ranked 135th.

It was the first tour-level, main-draw match of Kuzmova’s career, and the 967th for Williams, who won the title at Flushing Meadows in 2000 and 2001, in addition to her five Wimbledon championships. Williams is in her 19th U.S. Open; she reached the final in her 1997 debut, about eight months before Kuzmova was born.

“I had no idea what she looked like, who she was, anything. But she played amazing. She played well, served well, competed well. Definitely a match I had to earn,” said Williams, who at 37 is the oldest woman in the field. “I definitely wasn’t expecting or planning on dropping sets today. But things happen. That’s why we play the match, because you have to win the match. So it’s just all about regrouping. It’s the first round. You figure out what’s going on.”

She was up a set, plus a break in the second at 2-0, when she faltered. Kuzmova broke for 2-1, then pulled at even at 3-all before taking three games in a row to force a third set. But Williams righted herself there, breaking for a 2-0 lead, then digging out of a love-40 hole with five consecutive points for 3-0 and was on her way.

Williams entered the U.S. Open as one of eight women with a chance to rise atop the WTA rankings by tournament’s end.

Not that it was foremost on her mind. Indeed, she said she was unaware of that possibility.

“I just want to win, and if you get the win, you get the ranking,” said Williams, who was already at No. 1 in 2002.

Before the American’s match was over, that number of ranking contenders was reduced to seven, because the No. 7-seeded Konta was bounced by 78th-ranked Aleksandra Krunic of Serbia 4-6, 6-3, 6-4.

“I don’t take anything for granted,” said Konta, who was a semifinalist at Wimbledon just last month. “I think it would be quite obnoxious of me to come in here expecting I have a right to be in second week.”

Konta, who lost to Williams in the Wimbledon semifinals, figured to be Britain’s best chance for a deep run these two weeks, because the country’s top male player, Andy Murray, withdrew on Saturday with an injured hip.

Instead, she was among a crop of seeded players on the way out the door at a tournament already missing several top names, including the biggest in women’s tennis: Williams’ older sister Serena, who is expecting a baby.

“We always coach each other, pretty much,” Williams said.

While the most anticipated matchup of Day 1 was scheduled for Monday night — five-time major champion Maria Sharapova’s first Grand Slam action since her doping suspension, against No. 2 seed Simona Halep — the afternoon was filled with quite a few seeded players joining Konta on the way out.

For every victory by someone such as Wimbledon champion Garbine Muguruza or 2014 U.S. Open champion Marin Cilic, there was a surprise or two.

The men’s seeded losers included No. 21 David Ferrer, who was the runner-up at the 2013 French Open, No. 25 Karen Khachanov and No. 32 Robin Hasse. On the women’s side, there as No. 21 Ana Konjuh, No. 24 Kiki Bertens and No. 32 Lauren Davis.

source: sports.inquirer.net

Monday

Takahashi finally gets to be No. 1


KUALA LUMPUR — Mariya Takahashi may have learned judo from her father, but it was her mother, who introduced her to Filipino delicacies such as pancit and lechon.

The 16-year-old Takahashi went to her mother’s home province of Davao when she was 10 and that’s when she developed her love for Filipino food.

“My favorite is steak. But I also love pancit and lechon,” said the senior high school student at Shukugawa Gakuin High School.

She was the youngest gold winner for Team Philippines after winning the women’s -70-kilogram gold Sunday in the 29th Southeast Asian Games here.

“My strength is in-born. My father influenced me,” she said through judo officials Lorna and Takeshi Nakano. The Nakanos are parents of bronze winners Shugen and Keisei.

Takahashi honed her skills in Hyogo, a district in Japan which has a very strong women’s judo team.

Her father played judo for Aichi district and he helped his only child Mariya learn the ropes.

But back in the district level, Takahashi said her best achievement was only second place.

In this SEA Games, however, she’s the No. 1.

source: sports.inquirer.net

New Google Pixel phones to be launched on October 5, says tipster


Consistent tech tipster Evan Blass revealed in a tweet that Google may be announcing their new Pixel 2 smartphones by October 5.






He also added that these new devices may be powered by the Snapdragon 836 mobile processors.

It looks like there’s some coincidence at play as well since Google announced the first generation of Pixel devices on October 4, 2016.

At the beginning of August, Blass also shared a photo of what may be the the next generation of Pixel phones.




Compared to the recently announced Samsung Galaxy Note 8 and the anticipated iPhone 8, these new Pixel 2 devices appear to be more standard-looking. The photo suggests that the units lack the large display which the Note 8 has, and is expected of the iPhone 8.

Nonetheless, if Google is planning to start a tradition when it comes to launching their Pixel line of smartphones, October 5 makes sense for a Pixel 2 announcement. JB

source: technology.inquirer.net

Sunday

50-0: Floyd Mayweather stops Conor McGregor in 10th round


LAS VEGAS — Floyd Mayweather Jr. figured out a 50th opponent, letting Conor McGregor have the early rounds before stalking him late and leaving the mixed martial artist defenseless and exhausted on the ropes.

Mayweather battered McGregor around the ring in the later rounds, finally stopping him at 1:05 of the 10th round Saturday night with a flurry of punches that forced referee Robert Byrd to stop the fight.

Before a pro-McGregor crowd that roared every time the UFC star landed a punch, Mayweather methodically broke him down after a slow start to score his first real stoppage in nearly a decade. He did it in what he said would be his final fight, against a fighter who had never been in a professional boxing match.

McGregor boxed surprisingly well early. But after landing some shots in the first three rounds, his punches seemed to lose their steam, and Mayweather went on the pursuit. McGregor backpedaled most of the way, stopping only to throw an occasional flurry as Mayweather wore him down.

“I think we gave the fans what they wanted to see,” Mayweather said. “I owed them for the (Manny) Pacquiao fight.”

McGregor had vowed to knock Mayweather out within two rounds, and he won the early rounds with movement and punches to the head. But the tide of the fight turned in the fourth round as Mayweather seemed to figure out what he had to do and began aggressively stalking McGregor.

“I turned him into a Mexican tonight,” McGregor said. “He fought like a Mexican.”

In a fight so intriguing that it cost $10,000 for ringside seats, McGregor turned in a respectable performance for someone in his first fight. But Mayweather’s experience and his ring savvy paid off as he executed his game plan to perfection.

“Our game plan was to take our time, go to him and take him out in the end,” Mayweather said. “I guaranteed everybody this fight wouldn’t go the distance.”

Mayweather was widely criticized for not going after Pacquiao in their megafight, and he didn’t make the same mistake this time. In a fight that could make him $200 million he seemed to stagger McGregor with a series of punches in the ninth round, then came back in the 10th eager to finish it off.

McGregor went over and hugged Mayweather. He seemed almost happy in the ring afterward, secure that he had given a good performance even in losing.

“I was a little fatigued,” he said. “He was composed in there, that’s what 50 pro fights can give you.”

Mayweather ran his record to 50-0, surpassing Rocky Marciano’s 49-0 record and giving himself a great parting gift. He repeated afterward that he was not going to fight again.

“This is my last fight for sure. 50-0 sounds good, I’m looking forward to going into the Hall of Fame,” Mayweather said. “I picked the best dance partner to do it with.”

Irish fans arrived by the thousands in the days before the fight, filling the arena for the weigh-in and boisterously cheering for their man. They even went off in the middle of the night and spray painted an Irish flag and “49-1” on a billboard on Interstate 15 promoting Mayweather’s businesses.

The capacity crowd at the arena cheered McGregor on, but they quieted as the fight progressed and Mayweather showed his dominance.

source: sports.inquirer.net

Saturday

Mayweather, McGregor ready to rumble in much-hyped fight


LAS VEGAS — Conor McGregor has been kept pretty much under wraps ever since his fight with Floyd Mayweather Jr. was announced, emerging occasionally to trash Mayweather only to disappear again behind the closed doors of the UFC training center.


It’s not by accident. The biggest selling point of the spectacle that is Saturday night’s 154-pound fight is the unknown.

Is McGregor good enough to land a big punch on Mayweather? Did he acquire enough boxing skills in just a few short months to make what should be a lopsided fight competitive?

Inquiring minds want to know, and there are enough of them to make this the most watched fight in history. Some 50 million people in the U.S. alone are expected to gather with friends and family to see it all unfold.

“I will be the king of both sports,” McGregor crowed. “I’m already the king of fighting, I’ll soon be the king of boxing.”

Not so fast, said Mayweather, who comes from a boxing family and famously began throwing punches before he could walk.

“After 21 years I’ve been hit with everything and I’m still right here,” Mayweather said. “If you give it you must be able to take it.”

It’s a fight that really makes no sense other than millions of people want to watch it. But the economics of the fight wouldn’t make any sense, either, if people saw McGregor — the UFC star who has never boxed professionally — in action and decided he just wasn’t good enough to be in the ring with a fighter like Mayweather.

No mystique, no 5 million buys on Showtime pay-per-view. That’s why there was never any chance of McGregor having a tuneup fight.

And that is why the only boxing anyone outside McGregor’s inner circle has seen was him hitting the heavy bag in a comical media day performance and a few seconds of a UFC clip purportedly showing him knocking down Showtime announcer and former fighter Paulie Malignaggi.

No worries, said McGregor, who says his boxing talents shouldn’t be underestimated.

“I’ve been lacing up the gloves my entire existence,” McGregor said. “Of course, we will come with a different approach than people are used to, we will paint many pictures inside the ring. It’s not going to end well for Floyd. It’s not going to end well for all the people who are doubting me and are so convinced that this is what it is.”

McGregor weighed in at 153 pounds Friday to 149 ½ for Mayweather. A crowd that nearly filled the T-Mobile arena — many waving Irish flags — cheered loudly for McGregor while booing Mayweather.

McGregor’s fan base is driving this fight, united in their fervent hope that the Irish UFC champion can muscle Mayweather around the ring and deliver knockout punches to his head. Sports books in this gambling city have taken so many longshot wagers on McGregor winning by a knockout early that they will suffer their worst loss ever should it actually happen.

What should be a 100-1 fight began as 11-1 in Mayweather’s favor. Now it’s 5-1, though a lot of big money — including a few million dollar bets — has been wagered on Mayweather in recent days.

“I don’t see him lasting two rounds,” McGregor said. “He messed up with the 8-ounce gloves. Keep your hands up, keep them down. I don’t care. I’m going to break through whatever is in front of me.”

For the flamboyant McGregor the fight is a chance to make money he couldn’t dream of in the UFC and gain a fan base outside of mixed martial arts. Estimates vary, but he could take home $100 million for a challenge of Mayweather that seemed improbable when he first started talking about it two years ago.

He’s got youth on his side (he’s 29 and Mayweather is 40), and he’ll probably go in the ring much heavier than Mayweather after rehydrating following Friday’s weigh-in. He’s also got a reputation as a big puncher and the prevailing wisdom is he’ll try to maul Mayweather much like Marcos Maidana did in their 2014 fight.

Other than that, everything favors Mayweather.

He’s unbeaten in 49 fights as a pro and has a chance to pass Rocky Marciano on the perfect record list with win No. 50. Not only has he beaten every fighter put in front of him but he’s found ways to deal with big punchers like Miguel Cotto, Diego Corrales and Canelo Alvarez.

He’s also a pure boxer with an innate ability to adapt to any fighter put in front of him.

Mayweather is so confident of his chances that he’s spent much of the week before his fight having meet-and-greets in the early morning hours at the strip club he owns not far from the T-Mobile arena where they will fight.

Though he’s made hundreds of millions in the ring, Mayweather has a tax lien of $22 million to the IRS, so the lure of $200 million to come out of a two-year retirement and face a novice boxer was great. But he said this will be definitely be his last fight, and he wants to go out with a dominating performance.

“I gave my word to my children and once I did that it came to an end,” Mayweather said. “What better way to go out than with a bang.”

The fight is expected to match or surpass the 4.6 million pay-per-views sold for Mayweather’s 2015 fight with Manny Pacquiao at $99.95 a household. Industry observers say people across the country will use the telecast as an excuse to party in tense times and 10 people could watch each pay-per-view.

Tickets in the arena haven’t done nearly as well, largely because promoters wildly overestimated what people would pay to watch in person. Ringside seats were $10,000 and nosebleed tickets started at $2,500, though prices have been dropping rapidly as the fight approaches.

source: sports.inquirer.net

Friday

Canada soon to allow gender-neutral passports


Montreal, Canada — Canadian citizens who do not identify as male or female will soon be able to mark “X” on their passports and other identity documents, the government said Thursday.

From August 31, citizens will be able to add an “observation” to their passports stating their sex should be “identified as ‘X’, indicating it is unspecified,” the government said in a statement.

The move will help Canadians have documents that “better reflect their gender identity,” it said.

These interim measures will be in force until authorities are able to print an “X” on passports and other documents.

“By introducing an ‘X’ gender designation in our government-issued documents, we are taking an important step towards advancing equality for all Canadians regardless of gender identity or expression,” said immigration, refugees and citizenship minister Ahmed Hussen.

In June, Canada passed a law adding “gender identity and expression” alongside race, religion, age, sex and sexual orientation among prohibited grounds of discrimination under the Canadian Human Rights Act.

source: newsinfo.inquirer.net

McGregor must get rough and creative to upset Mayweather


LAS VEGAS — Just 20 months ago, a former plumber from Dublin fought a fearsome superstar who hadn’t lost in a decade. Conor McGregor talked his way into a big-money showdown, but he had to back up his boasts against Jose Aldo, one of the greatest fighters in his sport.

McGregor finished the UFC featherweight champion in 13 seconds with one devastating left hand.

Floyd Mayweather presents an entirely different challenge when McGregor steps in the Vegas ring Saturday night. In his professional boxing debut, McGregor must figure out how to beat Mayweather at his own game — something the best boxers in the world have never done.

McGregor is a massive underdog, and deservedly so. But stop pretending the improbable doesn’t happen in combat sports, particularly when the self-proclaimed Mystic Mac is involved.

To declare McGregor can’t possibly win this fight displays more arrogance than, say, spending every night at a strip club the week beforehand, as Mayweather is currently doing.

Of course the hard-hitting Irishman has a chance — and there are several tactics he could employ to pull the biggest upset in boxing history.

“The people who don’t believe it don’t know anything about fighting,” said UFC President Dana White, who admittedly has a slight bias here. “This isn’t going to be a boxing match. This is going to be a fight.”

It’s also a fight between a 29-year-old southpaw in his prime and a 40 1/2-year-old veteran who hasn’t fought in nearly two years and doesn’t particularly want to be here, as he acknowledged repeatedly Wednesday. Mayweather isn’t the fighter he once was, and his competitive fire is dwarfed by his need for the mammoth paycheck from this endeavor.

But how does an MMA fighter with no competitive boxing experience since childhood take on a 21-year pro veteran with world championships in five divisions and arguably the most brilliant defensive skills in the history of the sport?

He gets in Mayweather’s face, both before and during the fight.

He charges forward from the opening bell and forces Mayweather to think defensively all night.

He throws hundreds of punches from every angle with the goal of setting up the vicious left hand that has turned out the lights on MMA opponents.

And if none of that is successful, McGregor could bend the Marquess of Queensberry rules to their breaking point in hopes of goading Mayweather into a brawl.

None of it is guaranteed to work. But it’s definitely worth a shot.

Looking back at Mayweather’s history is a daunting task, given his 49-0 record, but it contains clues for tactics that could magnify McGregor’s chances.

For instance, McGregor could amplify the strategy used by Marcos Maidana and Jose Luis Castillo. Both boxers pressed Mayweather constantly, using roughhouse tactics on the border of legality, and bombarded Mayweather with punches, many from unorthodox angles.

Mayweather won both fights, but definitely looked uncomfortable for long stretches. McGregor doesn’t have the hand speed of those professional boxers, but he should strive to emulate their urgency.

He should also attempt to show Mayweather things he’s never seen before in the ring, and his decision not to hire a boxing trainer for the bout might actually help in that regard. The UFC star should switch stances and try just about any punch, including the looping overhand shots rarely seen in high-level boxing matches because they’re easily countered, but common in MMA bouts because of the distance they create from the opponent.

If McGregor gets hit, so be it. Every punch absorbed is the price for a chance to reply.

McGregor believes Mayweather made a mistake by agreeing to fight in 8-ounce gloves instead of the typical 10-ounce pillows, but he shouldn’t rely solely on the unicorn one-punch knockout. While McGregor has definite power, only the biggest Mac homer would think it’s something Mayweather hasn’t seen from boxers — and Mayweather has shown a solid chin and excellent recovery skills on the few occasions he has been hit.

Instead, the key is to use that energy to get in a good position to unload the left hand or a combination through Mayweather’s shifty defense. McGregor could repeatedly tie up Mayweather and attempt to land shots in the clinch.

These things could all unsettle Mayweather, who typically doesn’t face trouble unless he takes a voluntary risk by moving into dangerous areas to throw combinations, or getting angry and brawling a bit.

And therein is another potential route for McGregor. Call it the Aldo Strategy: If he can get Mayweather feeling both confident and angry, there’s a chance Mayweather will let down his defense enough to attempt to finish McGregor in brute style — and maybe McGregor will have an opening.

Mayweather hasn’t seemed interested in McGregor’s typical trash talk during the buildup to the fight, but perhaps he could waver the champion’s focus with the wrong word, an errant elbow or a rabbit punch behind the head — enough to draw a warning, but not lose a point.

McGregor amplified his boasts this week, calling Mayweather “a broken man” and vowing to finish him within two rounds. Nobody knows whether McGregor actually believes his bluster, but the Irishman has defiantly vowed he will win.

It’s not probable. But with McGregor, anything is possible.

source: sports.inquirer.net

US cabbie gets $1,000 tip for two-minute drive


NEW YORK, United States – A quick chat and a two-minute drive is all it took for an American cab driver to be tipped nearly $1,000.

Oumar Maiga, a night-shift driver from Philadelphia, was so stunned he waited a month for the credit card transaction to clear, convinced the mystery benefactor might claim a mix-up.

His boss, Freedom Taxi owner Everett Abitbol, said it was the largest tip he had ever seen for such a small fare: $4.31 for a brief, late-night pick-up in downtown Philadelphia.

Maiga picked up the anonymous passenger and the two struck up a conversation.

The two exchanged pleasantries about the driver’s busy schedule in the run up to Christmas and the customer said he knew being a cabbie was a tough job, Abitbol told AFP.

“He said, ‘hey, I’m going to take care of you’ and when our driver looked down he said ‘sir, I think you made a mistake’ but he said ‘that’s what I want to give you, I know what I did’.”

Abitbol said the tip couldn’t have happened to a nicer man, adding that Maiga had been with the company since it opened in 2011.

“He’s a family guy, a very, very nice driver,” said Abitbol. “You can always rely on him.”

source: newsinfo.inquirer.net
























Galaxy Note 8 launched, has massive screen and redesigned S Pen


One of the most anticipated smartphones for 2017 was finally announced, and it’s as massive as the pressure for it to do well.

The Galaxy Note 8 is the successor to Samsung’s Note line and the unfortunate Note 7. Like its predecessors, the Note 8 is a larger-than-average device with an edge-to-edge 6.3-inch Quad HD+ Super AMOLED Infinity Display.

This feature provides ample space for owners to utilize the redesigned signature S Pen for writing and doodling.

According to Samsung’s official statement, the S Pen has a finer tip and greater sensitivity than previous pens. It can also be used to translate text on foreign websites. Users need only hover the pen over text to translate specific words or full sentences.

In terms of productivity, a feature called “screen off memo” allows users to quickly jot down notes by simply pulling out the S Pen from its dock.

As for the photography feature, the Note 8 comes with three cameras: one in the front and two in the back. The rear camera assembly is a combination of a wide angle and telephoto lens system. A feature called Live Focus takes advantage of the hardware by giving users control in adjusting depth of field to achieve a bokeh effect. Front and back cameras can also be used at the same time with Dual Capture mode.

But the detail that consumers would be keeping a close eye on is the battery. The Note 8 has a smaller battery capacity at 3,300 mAh, compared to the Note 7’s 3,500 mAh. Note 8 has fast charging capabilities and can also recharge wirelessly.

Samsung points out that the Note 8’s battery has gone through the 8-point battery safety check. It’s a safety process that was developed in response to the Note 7 debacle.

Other features include an Android 7.1.1 operating system, 6 gigabytes of RAM, 64 gigabytes of internal storage with expansion up to 256 gigabytes, and an octacore processor. It also has a headphone jack.

The device and S Pen has a water resistance rating of IP68. This means it can survive accidental drops into water at up to 1.5 meters deep for around 30 minutes.

Pre-orders will start on August 24 and the Note 8 will be available in stores beginning September 15.

Based on specifications alone, the Galaxy Note 8 appears to be a fantastic piece of mobile technology. If all goes well, Samsung may be able to put the past behind it at last. JB

source: technology.inquirer.net

Wednesday

50 million could watch Mayweather-McGregor in the US alone


LAS VEGAS — Conor McGregor’s improbable challenge of Floyd Mayweather Jr. could be seen by a staggering 50 million people in the United States as fans and the curious gather in small and large parties.

The fight Saturday night threatens the pay-per-view revenue record set by Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao two years ago and could dwarf it in viewership as people use the event as a reason to have friends and family over for a little escapism and controlled violence.

“It’s a cultural event that crosses all demographics and all social and economic factors,” said Mark Taffet, who formerly ran pay-per-view for HBO. “People are getting together to have a great time and we surely need an excuse to have a great time.”

Taffet said that while an average of 5-6 people normally watches a pay-per-view, he wouldn’t be surprised if the fight averages 10 people a household. If it sells 5 million pay-per-views as widely anticipated, the fight could be watched by nearly one in six Americans.

The fight will also be seen by millions more worldwide, with promoters claiming it will be available either online or on a TV screen to more than 1 billion homes in 200 different countries.

“If you are in Manhattan or you are on a desert island somewhere, if you have Wi-Fi, you can buy this fight,” promoter Dana White said.

Each pay-per-view sale means more money in the wallets of both fighters. Though estimates vary widely, Mayweather is expected to make some $200 million, while McGregor will likely pocket at least $100 million.

Though ticket sales have been slow in Las Vegas — largely because of astronomical prices — the fight is shaping up as must-see TV at a price of $99.95. People are expected to buy the fight in record numbers, with many sharing the cost of the telecast with friends and family they invite over.

Taffet said people will treat it much like a Super Bowl by getting together in larger numbers than usual.

“I think this is first and foremost a television event,” said Taffet, who oversaw 190 pay-per-views in his career at HBO. “The success of this fight in the financial record books of history will be made on pay-per-view. And I believe it’s going to deliver.”

Industry observers say it’s hard to judge how many homes will buy a pay-per-view until the day of the fight many times, as people often buy late. But the anecdotal evidence — primarily the chatter on social media — indicates a good likelihood of it smashing the 4.6 million record of pay-per-view sales set by the Mayweather-Pacquiao fight.

That’s largely because the matchup will likely cross over from being just a sporting event to a party night.

“We have definitely seen massive general market interest in addition to the sports fan,” said Stephen Espinoza, who heads sports for Showtime, which will televise the fight. “These general market viewers are often not part of the audience for even the biggest combat sports event. So the ceiling is pretty high.”

Espinoza said the very nature of the fight — a matchup between a UFC star who has never boxed as a pro against one of the greatest fighters of his time — will drive the pay-per-view sales.

“We believe this is an unprecedented event, quite frankly no one knows what to expect,” he said. “The element of these two outspoken personalities in one unprecedented event is compelling.”

An early indication of interest in the fight is the massive betting both in Nevada and in other places where it is legal. Bookmakers say it will be the biggest bet fight ever, with an overwhelming number of the early tickets on McGregor to pull an upset.

Still, there are plenty of tickets left in the arena itself, where prices originally ranged from $2,500 in the upper sections to $10,000 at ringside. Ticket prices have been dropping in the resale market — with some available for less than $1,300 on Tuesday — and are expected to decline more in the days before the fight.

source: sports.inquirer.net

How Mortgage Penalty Is Calculated In Canada

For most home buyers shopping for a mortgage, interest rate is the most important aspect of the process. However, it’s important to look past mortgage rates and also consider penalty rates. While no one plans to break their mortgage, there are many reasons you may have to in the future and it’s smart to plan for all possibilities.


Unforeseeable circumstances such as divorce, a move, a change in finance, or other personal circumstances may mean that you can’t complete your mortgage term. It’s important to plan for the possibility that you may not be able to see your term through right from the beginning, or you may get hit with a huge penalty. When discussing your mortgage, either with a bank or mortgage broker firm, make sure you ask about the process of breaking a mortgage, and the penalties involved.

Mortgage penalty is calculated using the interest rate differential. Typically, the penalty is calculated by taking the greater of three months interest on the remaining balance, or the interest for the remainder of the term on the remaining balance. There’s little point in trying to save a couple dollars a month on a low interest rate, if you end up getting hit with thousands in penalty rates for having to break your mortgage. Looking ahead to all possibilities can help you be prepared in the face of unexpected costs, and avoid any nasty surprises.


Something to consider as well when it comes to mortgage penalties is the difference between a fixed and variable rate mortgage. Fixed rate mortgages tend to have higher penalties than variable rate mortgages. It’s worth visiting a mortgage broker firm and discussing these options, as it can be overwhelming to research it all on your own.

When searching for lower penalty rates, it’s all about the lender. Smaller mortgage broker firms tend to offer better penalty rates than the larger ones, or banks. Even though it may be the last thing on your mind when shopping for a mortgage, planning ahead for the possibility of breaking your mortgage can save you thousands of dollars.

At Northwood Mortgage, our mortgage professionals work hard to find you the lowest and best mortgages rates and terms. Mortgage shopping can be difficult, especially for the first-time home buyers, and there are so many factors to consider. Our mortgage experts can help you navigate the tricky world of mortgage shopping, and find you the best mortgage for your needs. Contact us today to set up a meeting.

source: northwoodmortgage.com

Tuesday

WATCH: Charity event offers winner wine date with Jennifer Lawrence


Jennifer Lawrence remains one of Hollywood’s most desirable bachelorettes, and one lucky guy will be able to take her out on a fancy wine date.

Online fundraising platform Omaze is giving one fan a chance to fly to California and experience a wine-tasting event with none other than the 27-year-old actress.

As seen in a now viral ad, the “Hunger Games” star explained why she’s qualified as a wine-testing companion through a fun game of “Movie or Wine Review.”

“You want to help stop political corruption… and drink a ton of wine?” the alluring actress asked at the beginning of the clip, where she guessed which reviews were pertaining to wine or one of her movies.

“We’ll hang out, drink some wine, talk politics, drink wine, maybe we’ll call your ex, maybe we’ll call my ex,” she jokingly said.

Meanwhile, interested participants may enter omaze.com/jen and pick out any amount they are willing to donate.

The winner will also receive a package of lawn games, a picnic and accommodations at a 4-star hotel and airfare.

All proceeds will go to Represent.Us charity, which aims to “pass state and local anti-corruption laws that stop political bribery, end secret money and fix the broken election system.” /ra

source: entertainment.inquirer.net

Monday

Apple’s iOS 11 will feature Touch ID ‘quick disable’


The iOS 11 is currently in its public beta testing stage, allowing some Apple users to try out the upcoming operating system update before it gets released.

Some users have discovered a new safety feature and spoke about it over Twitter.

User Kia (@alt_kia) tweeted screenshots of the new feature which would allow users to temporarily disable Touch ID.

The images stated that tapping the home button five times continuously will lock the Apple device. To unlock the iPhone, a password needs to be entered.

While in it’s locked state, Apple users may only use the device to call emergency services.

The added security layer should also work with the assumed face recognition feature of upcoming iPhones. It would allow users to discreetly and quickly lock their devices when they feel there is a danger of being forced to disclose personal data.

Apple users may try out this new feature along with other features by signing up for the free Apple Beta Software program and downloading the iOS 11 beta update. JB

source: technology.inquirer.net

Sunday

Halep in line for No. 1 after Cincinnati semifinal win


MASON, Ohio — Simona Halep moved within a victory of the No. 1 ranking.

The second-ranked Halep needed just 54 minutes to cruise past Sloane Stephens 6-2, 6-1 on Saturday in the Western & Southern Open semifinals, and can displace Karolina Pliskova as the top of the ranking with a victory over Garbine Muguruza on Sunday.

The fourth-ranked Muguruza reached her first W&S final with a 6-3, 6-2 victory over defending champion Pliskova.

The men’s final will feature two first-timers. Grigor Dimitrov outlasted John Isner 7-6 (4), 7-6 (10) in the first men’s semifinal. Nick Kyrgios beat David Ferrer 7-6 (3), 7-6 (4).

Halep, seeking her first No. 1 ranking, has yet to drop a set in the tournament and appears to be peaking at just the right time.

“I think I played my best match on hardcourt so far,” said Halep, who can become the first Romanian woman to be ranked No. 1. “It felt great. I moved very well today. From the first point, I felt like I was going to play good tennis.”

The final Sunday will be the first on American soil for Muguruza, who lost to Pliskova in last year’s W&S semifinals after losing to Serena Williams in the 2015 finals. The Spaniard had lost six straight matches against Pliskova since winning their first in 2013.

“I was very precise with my shots,” said Muguruza, who is 2-1 in her career against Halep, though the two haven’t played since 2015. “I wanted to be more aggressive and take my shots. I felt pretty good out there – under control. Everything went my way.”

Muguruza won when Pliskova sailed a forehand long on the fifth match point. Pliskova, who played part of one match and all of another Friday after rain forced postponements Thursday, had 28 unforced errors to Muguruza’s 13.

Muguruza was coming off playing the tournament’s longest match, a 2-hour, 45-minute three-set win over Svetlana Kuznetsova on Friday. That followed a 2-hour, 18-minute win over Madison Keys on Thursday, when she fought off three match points.

“I don’t think I played my best tennis today,” Pliskova said. “I think the energy was pretty low from my side. Obviously, a tough schedule for me the last two days – three matches in about not even 24 hours.

“I think she played very solid, not missing much and obviously serving well. Everything started, I think, in the first game of the first set.”

Muguruza took charge early, breaking Pliskova in the first and last games of the first set.

She gained a second-set edge with a backhand winner on break point for a 4-2 lead before closing it out in 1 hour, 19 minutes.

Stephens, playing her fourth tournament since returning from January foot surgery, also was playing a third match in a span of 24 hours.

“That’s never easy,” she said. “I’m going to go with that. I didn’t play that badly. She was a little fresher. It was just not a great day.”

The 11th-ranked Dimitrov, who lost in the last year’s semifinal to eventual champion Marin Cilic, had just one double fault and finished with nine unforced errors to No. 19 Isner’s 28 in the 2-hour, 3-minute match. The Bulgarian will play the winner of the semifinal between Nick Kyrgios, who knocked out second-ranked Rafael Nadal in straight sets in a Friday quarterfinal, and David Ferrer.

“Today was, I think, one of those matches that I really had to just be patient,” Dimitrov said. “I think that that was the key. I knew I’m not going to have that many rallies against John. I knew that he’s going to serve big, bold serves. I just had to be very composed and use every opportunity that I had. I think in the end of the match, it was just a few points that made the biggest difference for me. I’m just happy obviously with the win, but I’m just happy with the way I kept myself together throughout the whole match. Just remained calm in those tough moments. I mean, I know it’s nerve-wracking from outside, but it’s even tougher when you’re in there and have to receive a serve that comes 141 mph.”

Dimitrov’s composure was the key, according to Isner.

“The difference was he was a lot more decisive at the big moments,” Isner said. “He was a little calmer as well — a little more free-flowing in big moments. I thought he played a high-level match. He certainly is in good form. I played well enough to beat a lot of players today — just not him.”

Kyrgios and Ferrer displayed remarkably efficient serving in their nightcap. They combined for six break points, converting none.

source: sports.inquirer.net

Saturday

3 Signs To Refinance Your Mortgage

Refinancing your mortgage simply means replacing your existing mortgage with another one. Homeowners often refinance their mortgages in order to get better interest terms and lower mortgage rates. When you refinance your mortgage, your existing mortgage doesn’t simply disappear. Rather, it is paid off and a new loan is created. You may be thinking of refinancing to get lower mortgage rates, or perhaps you’d like to change your interest terms, for instance, from a variable to a fixed rate. Here are some signs that it could be a good idea to look into refinancing:




1.Current Interest Rates Are Lower
Most lenders advise the best time to refinance is when the interest rate is at least two percentage points below your existing mortgage rate. If the current interest rate is substantially lower, refinancing can be a good way to save money. By getting a lower mortgage rate, you will be able to build equity in your home more quickly.

2. Making a Big Purchase
If you need to make a big purchase, such as a car or education, you can refinance your mortgage in order to take out a line of credit on your home. A home equity line of credit allows you to use your home equity as collateral in a substantial loan. If you choose to refinance and take out a home equity loan, then the value of your home will be appraised. This means that if you’ve made substantial improvements to your home over the years, or the market has gone up, you can take out sizable home equity lines of credit, while paying off your mortgage.

 3. Home Equity
Having greater home equity, meaning the percentage of the home you own outright, can make it easier to qualify for refinancing. Most lenders want to see that your equity is at least at 20% before approving a refinance, however in some cases you can still qualify with less than that. Put simply, the more equity you have in your home, the better your refinance terms will be.

Refinancing can be risky and the best way to determine if it’s right for you is to speak to one of our mortgage professionals. Mortgage rates can change quickly and we are dedicated to finding you low mortgage rates, as well as short-term rate promotions. If you are considering refinancing, but would like more information about how to proceed, contact us today.

source:  northwoodmortgage.com

NASA urges people to wave at moon during Aug. 21 eclipse


The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) recently confirmed the presence of the “Great American Eclipse,” which will engulf the skies across the United States on Aug. 21.

A grand phenomenon of this magnitude certainly deserves to be documented, which is why the space agency is using its Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) to capture its essence.

According to a recent NASA press release, people along the line of “totality” are urged to wave their hands and cheer as the LRO’s camera captures an image of the Moon’s shadow on Earth.

“I’m really excited about this campaign because it is something so many people can be a part of,”  Andrea Jones, LRO public engagement lead at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, said. “So much attention has been focused on the lucky folks who will get to experience eclipse totality, but everyone in an entire hemisphere of the Earth can wave at the Moon as LRO takes our picture!”

NASA also made it known that the Moon will be far enough from Earth during the eclipse, which will make the resolution of the images at only 2.5 miles per pixel.

“While people should not expect to see themselves in the images, this campaign is a great way to personalize the eclipse experience,” said Noah Petro, LRO deputy project scientist at Goddard. He added that the camera wouldn’t be able to capture people or buildings, but would still cover continents, clouds and large surface features.

Although people are invited to celebrate the extremely rare occurrence, NASA advised those who will be in the 70-mile-wide path to use proper eclipse glasses when staring at the Sun—even as it begins to vanish.  Khristian Ibarrola  /ra

source: technology.inquirer.net

Friday

Mayweather warns of hefty fine if McGregor kicks him in their fight


It’s just over a week away from one of the most anticipated bouts in boxing, as undefeated fighter Floyd Mayweather Jr. returns to the ring to face off UFC lightweight champion Conor McGregor.

The former is known to be the ultimate boxing tactician, while the latter is a complete mixed martial artist, adept in using both his arms and legs in combat.

In a recent appearance on Jimmy Kimmel Live, Mayweather was asked what would happen if his opponent decides to throw a kick or any other MMA technique during their 12-round boxing showdown on Aug. 26.

“That’s a fine, that’s a huge fine,” he told host Jimmy Kimmel.

“I don’t think he’d want to lose, probably 90 percent of his money or even more. I don’t know what it’s gonna be, but it’s gonna be a heavy fine,” he added.

Although it remains highly unlikely that McGregor would throw such a blatant illegal strike, the brash Irishman is known to be as unpredictable as it comes.

Aside from the probability of receiving a high kick, Kimmel also asked the 40-year-old boxing icon about the possibility of a second fight, this time inside the Octagon under MMA rules.

“As of right now, we gotta get past August 26,” Mayweather said. “Once we get past August 26, then we can talk about other things.”

A clip of Mayweather’s full interview is available.  /ra

source: sports.inquirer.net

Bodies strewn on street in Barcelona van rampage


BARCELONA, Spain – Barcelona’s most famous street was packed with tourists when a van drove into the crowds on a sunny Thursday afternoon, leaving scenes of carnage and panic.

“There were bodies on the ground with people crowding round them. People were crying,” Xavi Perez, who sells sports magazines just 100 meters away from the attack, told AFP.

The region’s interior minister gave a grim toll from what police said was a terror attack: 13 dead and more than 50 injured.

Among the foreigners caught up on Las Ramblas was Aamar Anwar, a renowned Scottish human rights lawyer in Barcelona for a conference and had been walking down the boulevard when the terror unfolded.

“All of a sudden I heard a crashing noise and the whole street just started to run screaming,” he told Sky News, describing a scene of thousands of people struck by chaos and panic.

“I saw a woman next to me screaming for her kids.

“Literally within 30 seconds, police vans, ambulances, police officers with guns were piling out, and we were sectioned off and then being pushed rapidly back,” he said.

Another witness said he saw a man fleeing.

“I saw a man run down the Ramblas, with police chasing him and he appeared to drop a black metal object. It looked like a pistol,” said the witness who only gave his first name, Sergio.

Another man at the scene told Spanish television channel TVE that he saw the suspect.

“It was a person in their 20s, he was very young, brown hair, a slim face. I saw him when the van stopped. We were very close to everything.”

‘Screams and then a crash’

As people ran for their lives they were replaced by armed police officers who sealed off the scene.

“Van upon van of police officers” then arrived, Anwar said. “They have quite clearly unfortunately had to plan for something like this.”

Another visitor, Susan McLean, who was 100 meters away, said it was terrifying.

“All of a sudden, scores of people ran towards us — hysterical, children hysterical. They first of all said someone had been shot.

“It calmed down for a moment then all of a sudden a second wave of people came down the street. Our hotel was one street away so we got ourselves out,” she told Sky.

“We could see the police, we could see all the cars stopped.

“The police were doing their job. We really had no idea what was going on other than we had to get ourselves out of there very quickly.”

Tom Gueller, who lives on an adjoining road, fled the scene when he saw the van hurtling through the crowds.

“I heard screams and a bit of a crash and then I just saw the crowd parting and this van going full pelt down the middle of the Ramblas and I immediately knew that it was a terrorist attack or something like that,” he told BBC radio.

“I ran away, I mean I live near, I had to run back about 50 meters or so and go up to my flat and obviously see what’s happening on the road from my balcony.”

Asked about the van, he said: “It wasn’t slowing down at all. It was just going straight through the middle of the crowds in the middle of the Ramblas.”

Steve Garrett was in a nearby market and sheltered in a bakery with several others.

“Coming from England it was reminding me a great deal of what happened in London, so we were very concerned about what might happen next.”

Armed police then appeared.

“They seemed to sweep through the market area. They seemed to be looking for someone. They were going very carefully, very cautiously, stall to stall,” he said.

source: newsinfo.inquirer.net

Thursday

McGregor vows fast finish against Mayweather


Los Angeles, United States —Conor McGregor believes he will knock out Floyd Mayweather inside two rounds but is ready for all scenarios when the two fighters clash in their eagerly anticipated superfight next week.

Irish mixed martial arts star McGregor told reporters on a conference call on Wednesday that a controversial switch to lighter gloves could lead to an explosive outcome in the August 26 showdown in Las Vegas.

McGregor, who is widely seen as a massive underdog against undefeated former welterweight king Mayweather, predicted an early finish to the fight.

“Particularly with the eight-ounce gloves, I don’t believe he makes it out of the second round,” said McGregor, nevertheless expressing the hope that the fight would last longer.

“I don’t want people saying ‘Oh, it was a lucky punch’ and all that. Part of me is hoping maybe he can last so I can show some skill and dismantle him that way.

“But I do not see him absorbing the blows in the first few rounds.”

The charismatic 29-year-old said a grueling training camp has taken him to “hell and back” and left him ready to face any kind of scenario inside the ring at the T-Mobile Arena.

“There is no way in hell that I’m not ready to fight in the deepest of trenches in this contest,” McGregor said.

“We are ready for both scenarios. I’m ready to go to war for 12 rounds and I’m ready to put him away early on.”

Ultimate Fighting Championship President Dana White also believes the gloves switch could shape the outcome of the fight.

‘Hits like a truck’


The move is widely seen as benefiting both fighters — Mayweather’s fast hands could be quicker with lighter gloves, while McGregor will be able to make his punching power more keenly felt, provided he can land a blow on his American opponent.

“I think it affects the contest a lot,” White said when asked if McGregor would be helped by the change.

“Yes, Floyd will be faster with eight-ounce gloves but he’s more defensive. Conor hits like a truck, so smaller gloves helps him big time. I think it absolutely does.”

McGregor and Mayweather will climb into the ring following an international publicity tour last month marked by expletive-laden tirades and trash-talking.

McGregor, who was criticized for addressing Mayweather as “boy” during one event, dismissed suggestions that there was a racially tinged dimension to the duel.

“For me, it’s athlete versus athlete,” McGregor said. “I’m disappointed to hear the way it’s being portrayed. All I can do is stay focused on my craft and go out and put a performance for my fans.”

McGregor, meanwhile, said he has used disparagement by the boxing community as motivation.

“It has certainly been motivating, the disrespect and the disregard for my skill set,” McGregor said.

“I look at people so many times and their mind is closed to how things can be done. It’s a set way and there is no other way. Well, if that was the case we would have never reached across the oceans in search of other lands. We would never have gone into space.

“You have to have an open mind and you got to realize that there are other ways. Fighting is a complex game. But I’m just looking forward to August 26 and proving what I’m saying and educating the world of what martial arts is.”

source: sports.inquirer.net

Wednesday

Del Potro, Kyrgios advance, Raonic withdraws in Cincinnati


Juan Martin del Potro and Nick Kyrgios took positive steps in their U.S. Open preparation by ousting seeded opponents to reach the second round of the Cincinnati Open on Tuesday.

Former U.S. Open champion del Potro beat 10th-seeded Czech Tomas Berdych 3-6 7-6(1) 6-0, while Kyrgios opened with a 6-2 6-3 dismissal of ninth seed David Goffin of Belgium in the Cincinnati heat.

Earlier in the day, sixth-seeded Canadian Milos Raonic announced his withdrawal from the tournament due to a lingering left wrist injury.

The talented non-seeded winners, who have both battled injuries this season, excelled on serve.

Del Potro powered in 17 aces in overcoming Berdych after a listless opening set.

The Argentine, who was last week ousted in the second round in Montreal by Canadian teenager Denis Shapovalov, upped the aggression in the second set and found his range with his big forehand to force a tiebreak.

He raced to a 5-0 lead in the tiebreak, which he claimed 7-1 before blanking Berdych in the third set.

"I think I played really good tennis in the second and the third set. I think my game improved after a big effort in the second set," Del Potro told the Tennis Channel.

"I think I can be better, can play much better. I'm having a tougher draw in all tournaments, but I like just to play tennis after all my injuries and I'm so happy to have the chance."

Del Potro, who has a history of wrist problems and had a groin injury this season, next plays American qualifier Mitchell Krueger.

Kyrgios cracked 10 aces in a one-sided victory over Goffin.

"He doesn’t have the biggest of weapons and I kind of caught a good rhythm against him," said the 22-year-old Australian, who retired from three tournaments in a row with hip and shoulder injuries this season.

"He’s by far better than me from the back of the court. He loves playing from the ground so I tried not to give him much rhythm. I just hit two first serves every point, pretty much.”

Asked about his hip injury, Kyrgios said: "I can still feel it. It’s always tough to play and try to build some strength."

Kyrgios will next meet Aleksandr Dolgopolov of Ukraine, who came through 6-4 7-6(6) against big-serving South African Kevin Anderson, who hit 24 aces. — Reuters

Monday

9 things I learned after wearing a fitness tracker for a month

The Fitbit Alta HR is the newest model of the fitness tracker that seems to be all the rage these days. More and more people are tracking down the number of steps they take a day and more, thanks to the very many features the Alta has: people are tracking down their sleep, their daily caloric intake, calorie burn, water intake, heart rate, exercise, and number of steps in an hour.

I wore the Alta HR for a month and if I may: It’s almost a lesson on self-awareness. I learned more about myself than all those damn retreats and recollections I was required to attend in high school.


 1. Fat doesn’t mean unfit. I’m not fat but, I pant from just crossing the street! My boyfriend, who is overweight, does the same and doesn't break sweat. Wearing the tracker, I learned that my cardio fitness level was at…poor. I had a score of less than 27.0. No wonder my heart lands in the fat burn zone after just a few steps!

Before using the Alta, you have to download the app, sign up and give them your pertinent details — age, gender, weight. It's how Alta can then score you for all these measures. That’s how the Alta scored the 30-something me.

2. There’s nothing wrong with my chair.
A couple of years ago, my lower back started to hurt so bad that I saw a doctor — three actually: A rheumatologist, a nerve doctor, and a PT. I had to get an MRI, a nerve test that felt like how I imagined electrocution would feel like, a take medicines for an epileptic patient. I blamed it on my chair.

Alas, wearing the Fitbit told me it wasn’t my chair. It was me. I sat for too long at a time. Fitbit would have you take at least 250 steps an hour for nine hours of each day. It would send out cute vibrations as reminders for you to get up and stand up. When I heed the reminders, my nasty back pain didn’t show itself.

When I didn’t —as on my third week of wearing the alta because work pinned me down to my desk for hours at a time — Would you believe the pain actually really returned?

3. Doing 5,000 steps a day is easy.
Sure, 10,000 steps a day is what’s recommended, but I just started this thing and didn’t want to be defeated too early and life is overwhelming as it is. I didn’t want to pressure myself and I wanted a sustainable fitness thing, so I started small.

My goodness, I soon realized — six hours into wearing the alta — how easy 5,000 steps is. I quickly jacked my goals up to 8,000 steps. It’s still 2,000 steps below what’s recommended, but it’s a good enough goal: It’s challenging enough to make me want to crave and work for it.

Four weeks in, and the 8,000 steps still don’t come easy. Fitbit says I average about 7,300 steps a day. I’ve decided to give myself another two weeks to “master” the 8k before jacking up my goals in accordance with the recommendation of 10k.

4. The stairs at home (or in the office) is an amazing exercise machine.
I got a reminder from my Alta at 10:30pm one Sunday: I only needed 2,672 steps to achieve my goal. I whined: 2,672! That’s a lot!

But knowing my goal was already less than the usual 10k, I felt ashamed. So I went up and down the 16-step stairs we have at home. I played a game with myself: four steps down four steps up, eight steps down, eight steps up, and so on.

In less than an hour, not only did I achieve 8,000 steps, I was also able to get a legit 30-minute exercise — which the Fitbit also records, BTW. It has a SmartTrack feature that recognizes movement of at least 15 minutes.

I probably went up and down the stairs for 30 minutes; the next day, my legs were sore but my ass looked nice. So to people who say they can’t afford the gym and therefore cannot exercise: honey, you don’t need to go to the gym. Use the stairs, play a game with yourself.

5. You don’t really hate your job, or your life.
If you think you’re stuck at a dead-end or that promotion is taking too long, you may be right. But, you may be just bored, too. Before making any drastic changes, make small ones first. Get a Fitbit and set up little goals. Those hourly 250 steps help tremendously in making you feel unstuck! Excuse yourself and get walking! 

Even if you’re not into this whole fitness brouhaha, meeting them can do wonders not just for your body but for your self-esteem, too! Knowing you have achieved your sleep goals (uh huh, there is such a thing!), is as good an ego boost as, for instance, receiving all those compliments on Tinder.

6. Your body craves for exercise. It’s just your mind telling you you’re lazy. Once you feel the high of a 30-minute walk (and the added dose of good vibes from the confetti Fitbit showers on you when you’ve accomplished them), you’ll want to do it again and again. Pretty soon, you won’t be feeling as bored anymore. And you’ll realize there’s more to learn in your current position, there’s more you can do, and whoops! Promotions are in order in no time.

7. It’s important to measure everything. Fitbit is exactly that: a personalized measurement of what your body is doing and still capable of doing. It’s so easy to fall trap into trends — do this, not that type of thing — even Fitbit has a social aspect to it that will get to your competitive side, but if there’s anything that you’ll learn by having a Fitbit, it’s that there’s no one size fits all solution.

8. There’s a correlation between sleep and everything else. And not just the amount of sleep but the quality of sleep. With the tracker, I noticed my natural sleep cycle, which is why, one time, I got woken up in the middle of a dream – that’s REM for us – I was super lethargic the entire day.

9. You still really have to listen to your body.
The Fitbit’s great —I am a reformed non-believer, in fact — but it’s not the end-all and the be-all of fitness. It’s a machine after all. It can’t record that wrist injury. It can get its records wrong. For instance: last week, I had an intense two-hour workout at my climbing gym, but all it said was I was active for just 17 minutes. It said my  heart rate reached its peak zone and it recorded my steps up the wall, but it didn’t record it as a completed exercise (I wanted that star!). So yeah, you still have to listen to your body. — LA/GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Sunday

Change or die: American malls confront Amazon era


As the retail industry churns in the Amazon era, American shopping malls are turning to a new generation of stores, food and entertainment offerings to make up for an exodus of department stores.

Prime mall real estate is increasingly going to players who began online and are graduating to brick-and-mortar, such as plus-size clothing label Eloquii, or stores selling niche items like candy and conflict-free diamonds.

In some cases, these retailers are taking space, literally, from exiting chains like Macy’s.

Other additions include the trendy burger restaurant Shake Shack, and Dave & Buster’s, whose video game and pro-sports viewing restaurants are emblematic of the “experiences, not stuff” mantra now resonant among consumers.

The changes to malls — climate-controlled beacons to American consumerism that grew rapidly in the latter part of the 20th century — are part of a fundamental industry rethink as e-commerce, led by gargantuan purveyors like Amazon, takes market share and alters consumer expectations.

“This isn’t the same culture as 30 years ago,” said retail industry analyst Dana Telsey, who sees today’s moves as the “early innings” of a multi-year evolution.

Malls will endure because they offer “the excitement of being able to see what’s new,” she told AFP. “It’s a meeting place. It’s an entertainment center.”

“You’re always going to have shopping centers that engage,” said Telsey, chief executive of Telsey Advisory Group.

The changing times are a period of reckoning for hundreds of second-tier shopping centers in a country that experts say has long been “overmalled.”

A January review of 1,070 malls in the US by Green Street Advisors, a real estate research and advisory firm, classified more than 330 malls as “at risk to close” due to declining occupancy, low sales, weak socioeconomic demographics and anchor store vacancies.

“These malls only account for roughly five percent of mall value in the US,” the report said. “Most won’t be missed.”

Survival of the fittest

Many of the most vulnerable malls were built in the 1960s and 1970s with department stores as anchors that attracted enough customers to also support secondary stores.

But stores in malls were often pricier than free-standing shops because of the heavy rents for common costs such as heating, maintenance and security, said Fred Hurvitz, professor in retail studies at Penn State University’s Smeal College of Business.

The arrival of e-commerce and greater price transparency means malls must compete not only with Amazon for more cost-conscious customers, but with discount chains.

“You’re seeing a whole movement towards any way you can save the customer money, that’s going to make you more viable with the customer,” Hurvitz said. “Without high traffic levels, the malls die.”

The exodus of retailers means shopping centers that were once hives of activity are hollowed-out shells with a few well-stocked shops surrounded by empty storefronts. Parking lots that were jammed with cars a few decades ago are now mostly empty seas of asphalt.

“It’s a very depressing place,” Nakul Kumar, an economics professor at Bloomsburg University, said of the Columbia Mall in Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania, which just lost its J.C. Penney store.

Kumar joined a Planet Fitness gym that opened earlier this year at Columbia Mall in a space formerly occupied by Sears, and he says he hopes that increased traffic from gym members will spur more activity.

But it was not, perhaps, a good sign when Columbia Mall was profiled earlier this year by filmmaker Dan Bell as part of his YouTube “Dead Mall Series.” The Baltimore documentarian has also featured visits to seen-better-days malls in North Carolina, Tennessee and Maryland.

Bell’s portfolio was spotlighted in a July New York Times Style story that rued the passing of an era.

New investments


Yet mall developers dismiss talk of their demise despite today’s retail industry travails.

“I will tell you, it’s not a very fun environment,” David Simon, chief executive of the real estate investment trust Simon Property Group, said recently about finding new takers for vacated real estate.

“We’re pounding the pavement more than ever,” he said in a conference call.

Simon said he has been encouraged, however, by a trend of e-commerce chains like apparel maker Eloquii or eyeglasses seller Warby Parker raising capital to open brick-and-mortar stores. Some of these newer brands could ultimately have as many as 400 stores, he said.

“In this cluttered world of trying to get people focused, we are seeing more and more brands that want to gravitate to where the traffic is,” Simon said. “By and large, in communities throughout the country, that’s the mall. And that has not changed.”

GGP, another real estate investment trust, plans $1.5 billion in mall investment, including a greenfield mall in Norwalk, Connecticut and a major expansion to the Staten Island Mall in New York City that it bills as a “shopping center of the future.”

Staten Island will add the German supermarket chain Lidl, as well as Dave & Buster’s, a new AMC movie theater and a few new apparel stores.

GGP has also budgeted “refresh capital” for existing malls — sometimes stretching into the millions of dollars. The company recently removed an old fountain and spiffed up the dining area at its Wayne, New Jersey mall.

“You’ve turned your old, very tired looking food area into something very modern,” Kevin Berry, a vice president at GGP, said of the Wayne upgrade.

source: business.inquirer.net

Saturday

Oldies but still goodies delight viewers in spinoff show


For months now, “Little Big Shots” has won many viewers over with its weekly parade of amazingly precocious kiddie talents. Recently, however, the fave show has taken a curious detour in the opposite direction, showcasing oldies but still goodies in its “Forever Young” spinoff show.

The sudden shift has not been easy to take, but we gamely went along for the detour ride last week—and, despite an initial awkwardness, found ourselves liking the oldies just as much as the kiddies.

The rule now appears to be: Don’t even dream of showcasing your talent on the seniors’ show if you aren’t at least 60 years old. The idea is to show that age is only a number for the determinedly gifted and eager to please, so now merely middle-aged folks can make the grade.

—Which is not to say that all of the “Forever Young” talents look old and doddering. Indeed, the program loves surprising and even “shocking” viewers with how young and fit its featured seniors are, and what amazing feats they’re still capable of pulling off, despite their senior status.

For instance, a demure lady from China floored program host Steve Harvey with her audacious pole-dancing act! There was nothing demure or doddering about the fancy aerial splits she performed from way up high—and her legs were still lovely and lissome, for good measure.

Also scoring a direct hit with viewers was an old gent who did a nifty and shifty modern dance routine with a bevy of young chorus girls—even if he was already in his 80s!

Another senior entertainer who wowed the studio audience made his grand entrance stuffed into a very small metal box. He proceeded to slowly extricate himself out of the tiny cage, limb by limb—and, when he finally freed and presented himself in all his physical glory, he turned out to be a huge man, who just happened to possess an astoundingly pliant body that he could “fold” into that “impossibly” tiny space!

To make the amazing point even more convincing, he then proceeded to make his exit—by reversing the process, slowly “disappearing” back into his confining cage, again limb by limb—to the twice-delighted audience’s riotous applause!

We don’t know how long “Little Big Shots” intends to take its current “Forever Young” detour. If the senior talents it features are as good as the batch we saw, the spinoff could become a permanently separate show.

Reality check, however: US TV ratings show that “Forever Young” isn’t rating as high as “Little Big Shots”—which could make it a temporary detour gambit.

Even if it eventually says bye-bye, however, viewers will be grateful for its welcome reminder that talent will out at any age!

source: entertainment.inquirer.net