Month: April 2019

Home / Month: April 2019

A 10-term Democratic congressman has conceded defeat to a Boston city councillor who is now poised to become Massachusetts’ first black congresswoman in a race with parallels to a New York upset that rattled the party in June.

The Democratic nominating contest fight between US Representative Michael Capuano, 66, and Boston City Councilor Ayanna Pressley, 44, was his first since 1998.

"Clearly the district wanted a lot of change," Mr Capuano told supporters on Tuesday as he conceded. "I’m sorry that this didn’t work out."

With no Republicans on the ticket in Tuesday’s nominating primary, Ms Pressley is all but certain to succeed Mr Capuano in Washington in November’s congressional elections.

Ms Pressley argued she would bring new energy and awareness of the needs in the state’s only congressional district where a majority of residents are not white.

The race echoed the June primary in a safely Democratic New York City congressional district where first-time candidate Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez beat a 10-term incumbent, sparking fresh enthusiasm for progressive candidates across the United States.

Ms Ocasio-Cortez, 28, congratulated Ms Pressley on Twitter.

Both candidates had collected high-profile endorsements, with the Boston Globe newspaper backing Ms Pressley and the Congressional Black Caucus supporting Mr Capuano, who is white.

Polls and political observers predict the state’s nine House seats will remain in Democratic hands, along with the seat held by US Senator Elizabeth Warren, a leading progressive voice often cited as a possible 2020 White House contender. Governor Charlie Baker, a Republican who regularly shows up in polls as one of the United States’ most popular governors, is also expected to be re-elected.

Democrats need to pick up 23 seats in the House of Representatives and two in the Senate nationwide in the November 6 general election to gain a majority that could allow them to counter Republican President Donald Trump’s agenda.

A community of former NeoGAF members have worked together to launch a replacement gaming forum, ResetEra.

Among the ranks of its admins are many former NeoGAF posters, including industry insiders and well-known faces such as Shinobi, Nibel, ZhugeEX and Emily Rogers.

The board is designed as a fresh new home for gaming discussion, set up by those who quit NeoGAF after the events of last weekend.

A week ago, a claim of sexual misconduct against NeoGAF owner Tyler “Evilore” Malka was made public. It caused an explosion of anger directed towards Malka, who then angered NeoGAF mods and users by failing to address the situation for several days.

As NeoGAF mods quit and the site descended into anarchy, the whole forum disappeared offline. When it returned, there were new rules for anonymous moderation. Malka finally made a statement denying the sexual misconduct claim. Regardless, the past few days have seen a torrent of users quit the site, and post deliberately seeking a permanent ban.

In the background, ex-GAF mods and longtime posters were using Discord to plan the launch of ResetEra. Forum software was found, the site was named and set up, and here we are, seven days later.

NeoGAF remains online, of course, and its forums look like they have settled down to some degree. But, comparing the sites side-by-side, there’s at least as much activity now on ResetEra as on NeoGAF itself – and it feels like it’ll be a long time before the events of the past week will be forgotten.

The French town of Calais has been no stranger to public disorder in recent years, with recurrent battles between police and migrants or striking ferry workers making headlines across the world.

But now the port town is facing a bizarre new threat, according to its council: an alliance of hunters and farmers seeking to take revenge on vegans bent on turning the largely carnivorous French off meat.

The risk of trouble was so great that the council decided to cancel a vegan festival due to be held in the town centre on September 8.

The move was the latest episode in an ongoing battle between vegan militants and butchers and other providers of meat in the north of France.

So far it has been radical non-meat eaters who have been on the offensive, vandalising several butchers’ shops in the region and elsewhere in recent months, prompting the French federation of butchers to issue a plea for police protection.

But now the Calais mayor’s office said it had to ban the upcoming vegan event to "guarantee public safety" and to protect organisers and visitors from the "risk of an outbreak of public disorder."  

It provided no details but said authorities had become aware of a "series of operations aimed at stirring up trouble.”

Farplace, the association that organised the festival, was more specific about where the threats were coming from.  It claimed on the event’s Facebook page that town hall officials had told it that “hunters and farmers had come together to make very clear threats about what might happen if the event was held.”

The head of the butchers’ federation in the region, Laurent Rigaud, said that if the festival had gone ahead, “We were ready to organise a big barbecue (in Calais), along with hunters, farmers, and restaurateurs.”

He said about 400 people had said they would turn out for the meat-eating event, but insisted that they would have remained peaceful. “We wanted to… show that we are not the violent ones, but that there are extremists among the vegans,” he told Le Figaro newspaper.

The hippies have won. So is it time we all went vegan?

The festival organisers are currently looking for another venue to rent “outside of Calais” to host the event. With just three per cent of the population vegetarian or vegan in France, the notion of dropping meat from the menu has been slow to catch on and even frowned upon in a country proud of its boeuf bourguignon and foie gras.

French butchers have been subject of some scrutiny in recent months following a spate of hard-hitting reports from abattoirs and battery farms revealing apparently inhumane conditions in which animals are being kept and killed.

After EA tackled an “exploit” that involved using terrible players to beat the AI on the hardest difficulty in FIFA Ultimate Team, FIFA 18’s next big issue has come to the fore: a kick-off “glitch”.

The kick-off glitch isn’t really much of a glitch. Rather, it’s a tactic players are using to score goals that makes the most of FIFA 18’s overpowered passing and the initial set-up of the teams.

Here’s how it works: from kick-off, players pass the ball out wide to their fullback, then play the ball down the wing to their winger, cross and, hopefully, smash the ball into the back of the net. It’s an unsatisfying way to score and frustrating to be on the wrong end of, but everyone’s doing it.

Now, here’s why this kick-off strategy works. First off, FIFA 18’s passing is pretty powerful. Despite a recent nerf, you’re still able to accurately ping the ball about at speed with driven ground passes, and players will control the ball quickly. So, in FIFA 18 you can work the ball out wide quickly from kick-off and get an attack going.

Secondly, this strategy is effective because of the way the players set up on kick-off. The team taking the kick-off has its players pretty well spread out across the pitch, with fullbacks and wingers or wide midfielders close to the touchline. The defending team has fullbacks and wide players positioned nearby, but other players are bunched up in the middle of the pitch.

So, when you kick-off, you already have your wide players in position to receive the ball and attack down the wing, but it takes some time for supporting defending players to react, close down or help out their fullbacks and wingers, which leaves the attacker with space and advantageous one versus one situations. It doesn’t help that player switching in FIFA 18 isn’t great.

The FIFA 18 kick-off “glitch” looks like this:

Some FIFA 18 players reckon this kick-off tactic is the number one issue with the game right now. There are a load of how-to tutorials on YouTube, as well as plenty of FIFA community posts complaining about it. Most players online try it at kick-off, I’ve found.

As someone who’s played FIFA over the years, I reckon the series has always had a problem with goals scored straight from kick-off. But I have to admit, the issue feels particularly pronounced with FIFA 18, no doubt exacerbated by the quick-fire passing.

EA recently turned its attention to the FUT Squad Battles exploit, so perhaps it will have a look at this kick-off glitch in an upcoming update. An easy fix, some have suggested, would be to spread out the defending team so they find it easier to deal with the quick ball out wide.

Russia will next month hold its biggest war games since the fall of the Soviet Union, Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said on Tuesday, a massive military exercise that will also involve the Chinese and Mongolian armies.

The exercise, called Vostok-2018 (East-2018), will take place in central and eastern Russian military districts and involve almost 300,000 troops, more than 1,000 military aircraft, two of Russia’s naval fleets, and all of its airborne units, Shoigu said in a statement.

The manoeuvres will take place at a time of heightened tension between the West and Russia, which is concerned about what it says is an unjustified build-up of the NATO military alliance on its western flank.

NATO says it has beefed up its forces in eastern Europe to deter potential Russian military action after Moscow annexed Ukraine’s Crimea in 2014 and backed a pro-Russian uprising in eastern Ukraine.

The war games, which will take place from Sept. 11-15, are likely to worry Japan, which has already complained about a Russian military build-up in the Far East, something Moscow has linked to Tokyo’s roll-out of the Aegis U.S. missile system.

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is due to attend a forum in the Russian city of Vladivostok over the same period, and a Japanese Foreign Ministry official said on Tuesday that Tokyo always paid attention to shifts in Russian-Chinese military cooperation.

Shoigu said the war games would be the biggest since a Soviet military exercise, Zapad-81 (West-81) in 1981.

"In some ways they will repeat aspects of Zapad-81, but in other ways the scale will be bigger," Shoigu told reporters, while visiting the Russian region of Khakassia.

Shoigu said that both Russia’s Pacific and Northern Fleets would take part, while the Russian Ministry of Defence has said that Chinese and Mongolian military units will also participate.

Asked if the cost of holding such a massive military exercise was justified at a time when Russia is faced with higher social spending demands, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said such war games were essential.

Britain’s and Russia’s military compared

"The country’s ability to defend itself in the current international situation, which is often aggressive and unfriendly towards our country, means (the exercise) is justified," Peskov told reporters on a conference call.

When asked if China’s involvement meant Moscow and Beijing were moving towards an alliance, Peskov said it showed that the two were cooperating in all areas.

China and Russia have taken part in joint military drills before but not on such a large scale.

NATO spokesman Dylan White said that Russia had briefed the alliance on the planned exercise in May and that NATO would monitor it. Russia had invited military attaches from NATO countries based in Moscow to observe the war games, an offer he said was under consideration.

"All nations have the right to exercise their armed forces, but it is essential that this is done in a transparent and predictable manner," White said in an emailed statement.

"Vostok demonstrates Russia’s focus on exercising large-scale conflict. It fits into a pattern we have seen over some time: a more assertive Russia, significantly increasing its defence budget and its military presence."

Shoigu this month announced the start of snap combat readiness checks in central and eastern military districts ahead of the planned exercise.

"Imagine 36,000 armoured vehicles – tanks, armoured personnel carriers and armoured infantry vehicles – moving and working simultaneously, and that all this, naturally, is being tested in conditions as close as possible to military ones," Shoigu said on Tuesday.

Islamic state leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, in his first purported speech in nearly a year, has called on followers to persevere, according to a statement posted on the group’s media outlet.

"For the Mujahideen (holy warriors) the scale of victory or defeat is not dependant on a city or town being stolen or subject to that who has aerial superiority, intercontinental missiles or smart bombs," Baghdadi said in a recording posted on his al-Furqan media group.

Reuters was unable to verify whether the voice on the recording was Baghdadi’s.

Islamic State, which until last year controlled large areas in Syria and Iraq, has since been driven into the desert following successive defeats in separate offensives in both countries.

Baghdadi, who declared himself ruler of all Muslims in 2014 after capturing Iraq’s main northern city Mosul, is now believed to be hiding in the Iraqi-Syrian border region after losing all the cities and towns of his self-proclaimed caliphate.

The secretive Islamic State leader has frequently been reported killed or wounded since leading his fighters on a sweep through northern Iraq. His whereabouts are not known but Wednesday’s message appears to suggest he is still alive.

One of his sons was reported to have been killed in the city of Homs in Syria, the group’s news channel reported earlier this year.

Baghdadi’s last message came in the form of an undated 46-minute audio recording, released via the al-Furqan organisation in September, where he urged followers across the world to wage attacks against the West and to keep fighting in Iraq, Syria and elsewhere. 

Click:balloon twisting

Outside a McDonald’s in Latina, Italy, the city’s teens are clutching cigarettes and milkshakes while engrossed in a passionate debate about identity.

The discussion taking place under the golden arches that are perhaps the most recognisable symbol of globalisation is about whether or not a local park named after Mussolini should no longer bear the name of Italy’s wartime fascist leader.

This is Europe’s lost generation, weighed down by endemic youth unemployment. Now, after a decade of austerity and stagnation, some are reawakening the ghosts of their fascist forefathers as they search for meaning and occupation in an age of economic disruption.

A new wave of citizens are questioning whether,…

Donald Trump is to spend at least 40 days campaigning across America for the mid-term elections – more than either Barack Obama or George W Bush did while in office. 

The US president has tasked his aides with getting him out of Washington DC and in front of voters as much as possible in the run-up to the November election. 

Mr Trump’s 40 days on the road between August 1 to November 6 will make him the “most aggressive campaigner in recent presidential history”, according to a person familiar with his thinking. 

Mr Bush, the former Republican president, spent 33 days travelling in each of his two mid-term election campaigns while Mr Obama spent 36 and around 22 days in each. 

The campaign blitz is the clearest sign yet that Mr Trump believes his personal charisma and record in office can help swing races in favour of the Republican Party. 

However it comes with political risks, leaving the US president more politically vulnerable should the widely anticipated ‘blue wave’ of Democratic support come to pass at the ballot box.

The mid-terms, which take place two years after every presidential election, see votes for all House of Representatives seats and a third of Senate seats, as well as  races for statewide governors. 

Sources close to the US president spelled out their mid-terms strategy on Tuesday and made clear Mr Trump’s determination to hit the campaign trail. 

“The president’s objective this fall is to get more support in Congress so that he can keep winning on behalf of the American people. This means an ambitious campaign schedule unlike any previous president in recent history,” a source familiar with his thinking said. 

Mr Trump will hold at least eight rallies and 16 fund-raisers in up to 15 US states in the coming weeks, according to a source. 

North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana, Nevada, Kentucky and Tennessee are all expected to be visited, with other states likely to be added. 

Sources said that Mr Trump believes he can turn out the unusual coalition of supporters, which included traditional Democrat voters, that swept him into the White House in 2016. 

They also said the US president was helping secure a record number of donations for his party and defended his strategy of holding rallies, saying it would drive up new voters. 

The sources defined what success would look like for Mr Trump: Adding seats in the Senate, where Republicans hold 51 seats and Democrats 49; holding the Republican majority in the House of Representatives; and doing well in governor races. 

However they warned that the president was fighting against “history”, noting that opposition parties have gained seats in every mid-term election since the US civil war except for two: 1934 and 2002.

Metal Gear Survive comes out in February

April 4, 2019 | News | No Comments

UPDATE: Konami has announced the PC version of Metal Gear Survive launches alongside the console versions on 22nd February 2018. All versions cost £34.99.

ORIGINAL STORY: Metal Gear Survive comes out on 22nd February 2018 in Europe and 20th February in the US, Konami has announced.

This release date appears to relate to the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One versions of the game only – at least that’s what Konami’s promotional image, below, suggests.

Metal Gear Survive is still pegged for launch on PC via Steam, but it looks like we don’t have a release date for that version yet.

Metal Gear Survive, developed without series creator Hideo Kojima, is set in an alternate universe that sees the player-created character sent through a wormhole along with other Militaires Sans Frontières soldiers to a world populated by weird crystallised zombies.

Our Aoife checked out Metal Gear Survive back in August and said it isn’t awful as it is forgettable.

The French are up in arms again over fast food, but instead of tearing down a McDonald’s, this time they are fighting to save one from closing.

The land of haute cuisine is no stranger to protests against malbouffe, or “junk food”. But Marseille residents are now waging a legal and political battle to keep a McDonald’s outlet that has become a “centre of community life” and a much-needed job provider.

Marseille’s conservative mayor, Jean-Claude Gaudin, and its Socialist senator, Samia Ghali, have joined the campaign. If McDonald’s goes ahead with a plan to close its branch in Saint-Barthélémy, a north Marseille neighbourhood plagued by gang violence, drug trafficking and high unemployment, the senator has vowed to “oppose its presence throughout Marseille”.

With a staff of 77, the McDonald’s restaurant is the second-biggest private-sector employer in Saint-Barthélémy, which has an unemployment rate of 30 per cent — more than triple the national average. 

McDonald’s has won hearts and minds by hiring school dropouts and local youths desperate for work after serving prison terms. Many now fear losing their jobs.

The area’s bakery, butcher’s shop and hairdresser have already closed. Salim Grabsi, a member of a residents’ association, said: “There’s nothing left in areas like this and McDonald’s is a centre of community life, a place where families can sit down and relax with their kids.”

Annick Villanueva, a retired teacher, said: “My neighbours bring their grandchildren every week.”

Staff at the branch are challenging the legality of the plan to sell the outlet, owned jointly by a local franchise-holder and McDonald’s France. Kamel Guemari, the assistant manager, said the buyer’s proposal to convert it into an Asian restaurant “is nothing but a smokescreen dreamed up to allow McDonald’s to close without redundancy payouts.”

The franchise-holder, Jean-Pierre Brochiero, says the branch makes a loss. Staff obtained a court order last week suspending the sale on the grounds that he had failed to comply with a legal obligation to consult employees. The court is to rule on the case tomorrow (on Monday).  

The radical French farmer, José Bové, made international headlines by bulldozing a McDonald’s in a protest against punitive US taxes on Roquefort cheese and other French dairy products nearly 20 years ago. Since then, the American fast food chain has become a huge success story in France, which is now one of its most profitable markets. 

Nevertheless, McDonald’s continues to raise Gallic hackles. A court is to rule later this month on whether a McDonald’s can open on the Île d’Oléron, a major tourist destination off the coast of western France. A petition to keep McDonald’s out of the island has gathered more than 81,000 signatures. The local mayor says a McDonald’s would cause traffic jams on an island that is “not about mass consumption.”