Brian Dozier, an All-Star for the Twins, retires at 33 – Minneapolis Star Tribune

FORT MYERS, Fla. Whenever a popular Twins player from Brad Radke, Joe Nathan, Michael Cuddyer, Torii Hunter, through the M & M boys has a retirement news conference, the organization turns out in force.

The Zoom version of that occurred Thursday when Brian Dozier, 33, announced his retirement after nine seasons, including seven with the Twins. Dozier wore a perpetual grin on his face as Ron Gardenhire, Paul Molitor, Eduardo Escobar, Terry Ryan, Josh Willingham and even clubhouse major-domo Rod McCormick appeared on screen to wish No. 2 a happy retirement.

"You know how much I respect you, man," said Escobar, who got out of a Diamondbacks team meeting to congratulate Dozier. "You [taught] me [how to] play this game the right way, man. That's why I'm still here."

Escobar was the teammate who experienced good times and endured bad times with Dozier's help. Gardenhire was the manager who told Dozier to stop taking ground balls at shortstop after his rookie season when the Twins made him their full-time second baseman. Molitor was the manager who benefited when Dozier unlocked his power, blasting 42 home runs in 2016 the only Twin other than Harmon Killebrew and Nelson Cruz to reach 40 in a season.

"In addition to that performance, it was just how you took care of your teammates and made everybody better," Molitor said. "You were never selfish about anything that you do."

Of the 192 home runs Dozier hit in his career, 167 came as a second baseman for the Twins, a club record. He hit 127 home runs from 2014-17, sixth most in the American League.

Brian Dozier career statistics

He was traded to the Dodgers in July of 2018, playing in 47 games. In 2019, he signed as a free agent with the Nationals, who shook off a terrible start to win the World Series, but he only hit .238 during the season and went 0-for-6 in the postseason. After a brief stint in the Padres organization, Dozier signed with the Mets in July of 2020 but only played in seven games before being released a month later, and he began to realize his time might be up. After thinking about retiring during the offseason, he made it official Thursday.

"I was blessed, so blessed to be able to play for such good managers and general managers throughout my career and some people I respect forever and call them friends forever," Dozier said. "I played for some great organizations and so I appreciate all of you."

Gardenhire, of course, flashed his trademark humor while saluting Dozier.

"One of the nicest people I've ever been around in my life and really just thoroughly enjoyed watching him grow as a player," Gardenhire said, "and of course, after I left, he started hitting bombs all in the seats."

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Brian Dozier, an All-Star for the Twins, retires at 33 - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Local golf league results, aces and upcoming events – The Ledger

Results from golf league play around Polk County through Feb. 15 with format, date, event and winners by flight or class in alphabetical order.

Big Cypress Men's Thursday, Stableford, Feb. 11: First Flight - Gary Bryant, Tom McDonald and Doc Piper all at 37, Dave Turner and Bob Seidel tied at 36; Second - Bill Kauth 36, Bob Milley and Harm Oldenkamp both at 34, Eddie Lane, Gary Letourneau and Terry Deuell all at 32; Third - Mike Klein 37, Wayne Letourneau and Bart Tokas tied at 36, Bill Woloszyn and Harry Hostutler tied at 35; Fourth - Gary Lind 40, Tom Toczak and C.V. Woodring tied at 38, Bob Chapman 35. Closest to pin: No. 5 - Bill Kauth, Arnie Howard, Earn Hawn; No. 8 - John Sterling, Eddie Lane, Ken Short; No. 13 - Bob Seidel, Mike Klein, Bart Tokas; No. 15 - Gary Bryant, Eddie Lane, Rusty Doutt.

Cleveland Heights Men's Wednesday, Feb. 10: Green Tee - Rick Bertrand plus 8, George Lees plus 7, Gil Besse and Paul Boeh tied at plus 3; Yellow - Frank Shinn plus 11, Ted Thrasher plus 1, Woody Blades, Pat Jackson and Bob Shearer all at minus 1. Closest to pin: Green - Paul Boeh; Yellow - Frank Shinn.

Cleveland Heights Tuesday Men's, Draw and Quota Points, Feb. 9: Steve Criss/Gary Cornell/Lorne Matthews plus 12, Wayne College/Herb Koffler/Greg Spooner plus 9, Paul Pelchat/Chuck Smith/Dick Gebo plus 3. Closest to pin: No. A2 - Herb Koffler; No. A9 - Keith Wightman; No. C8 - Chuck Smith. Best Over Quota: A - Wayne College plus 8; B - Gary Cornell plus 5; C - Steve Criss plus 9.

Cleveland Heights Tuesday Women's, Tens and Putts, Feb. 9: First Flight - Barbara Schucht 135, Shirley Kalck 93, Gloria Leveillee 70; Second - Diane Oneil 133, Chris Westlund 104, Debra Funkhouser 46. December Putts: Barb Schucht 35, Chris Westlund 36.

Cleveland Heights Weekend Women's, Revert Three Holes to Par-Handicap, Feb. 14: First Flight - Vicki England 67, Penny Stephens 74, Mettie Withers 75; Second Jennifer Keser 63, Chris Westlund 65, Monica Hodge 72.

Eaglebrooke Men's Early Morning Group, Individual vs Average Points, Feb. 14: Larry Dunn plus 10, Jeff Lang plus 8, Mark Grey plus 6.

Grasslands Women's, Invitational, Gross/Net, Feb. 11: First Flight Overall Gross Juanita Nielson/Lynn Turner, Gross - Sisi Hedges/Jo Ahearn both at 76, Danette Hensel/Linda Inslee 77, Net - Jane Renninger/Kim Bohnenkamp 64, Becky Miles/Donna Dayton 68; Second Overall Net - Patty Hughes/Lindsay Barkhorst 62, Gross - Niki Bryan/Marci Kline 87, Diane Bertrand/Ann Zavitz 88, Net - Nan Habjan/Cornelia Corbett 71, Vicki England/Penny Stephens 71; Third Gross - Jennifer Wedlock/Mary Crowe 90, Rosalie DeLeo/Pam Johnson 98, Net - Claire Hennessey/Mary Ellen Krakowski 70, Joyce Sheppard/Milena Ilic 72.

Hamptons Ladies 18-Hole, Stableford, Feb. 11: Sally Fiske plus 10, Yvonne Zadonia plus 7, Faye Mountain plus 6. Closest to pin: No. 2 - Terese Utting; No. 13 - Judy Orioli.

Hamptons Men's, Net Stroke Play, Feb. 9: A Flight - Don Verhey 57 on a match of cards over Terry Foster and Rich Regan; B - Earl Kotsonis 46, Joe Schultz 49, Dave Trombley 55. Closest to pin: No. 3 - Bill Colclaser; No. 7 - Bill Stalilonis; No. 11 - Dave Trombley.

Hamptons Wednesday Stableford, Feb. 10: Front plus 6 - Terry Foster/Dan Emmeloth/Rob Brooks; Back plus 9 and Overall plus 7 - Earl Kotsonis/Jim Kermis/Bill Colclaser/Dick Turner. Closest to pin: Front No. 2 - Tim Clark; No. 6 - Bob Vollwerth; Back No. 12 - Joe DeBonis; No. 15 - Dave Nagle. Best Score: Greg Stephens 64.

Hamptons Valentine's Golf Scramble, Feb. 14: Bill Spivey/Joe DeBonis/Jeff Staber/Larry Baker minus 8 on a match of cards over Rob Brooks/Greg Stephens/Terry Foster/Tim Clark, Bill Colclaser/George Bradley/Ron Davis/Rich Regan minus 7 on a match of cards over Dan Koster/Dick Hansen/Jeff Wiesnewski/Dick Turner. Closest to pin: No. 12 - Denise Turmell; No. 13 - Bill Spivey.

Highland Fairways Thursday Scrambles, Feb. 11: Judy Maur/Joyce Cruise/Don Smitz/Jim Knutson minus 5, Caroline Low/Linda Bassett/Frank Bessett/Dick Hegeman and Donna Schnatzka/Grace Williams/Cee Lawrey/Howard Willis tied at minus 4, Vickie Fioravanti/Al Kula/Ray Berard/Bernie Bardeau minus 3. Closest to pin: Vickie Fioravanti and Phil Zelazny.

Lake Ashton Blue Man Group, Four-Golfer Game, Best Net on Par 4s, Best Two Nets on Pars 3 and 5, Feb. 10: Front 9 - Steve Beck/Larry Eason/Larry Seiter/Vince Adamo 32, Larry Griffin/John Ziebel/Gerry Getters/Ghost 33, Doug Stanforth/Bob Yeager/Jim Smith/Ron McKie and Jim Blackwell/Tom Anderson/Charles Lindberg/Jim Wagner tied at 35. Back 9 - Doug Stanforth/Bob Yeager/Jim Smith/Ron McKie 33, Steve Beck/Larry Eason/Larry Seiter/Vince Adamo and Steve Burrell/Larry Erd/Ken Favreau/Pete Riedy tied at 35, Gator Patrick/Leo McCafferty/Ed Costello/Ghost and Stephen Haynes/Art Luke/Bill Testa/Mike Costello tied at 37.

Lake Ashton Ladies 18-Holers, Best Net A/B Plus Best Net C/D, Feb. 9: First Flight - Cathy Powers/Margaret Volpe/Alex Latuk/Carole Ferrieri 121, Margie Dersham/Patti Panone/Barb Farmer/Maiji Baynes 124, Jan Baun/Pat Hodges/Carol Davis/Blind Draw 132; Second - Janice Smith/Mary Ann Stadfeld/Patty Wallner/Judy Mulhearn 120, Deb Foulke/Janice Kipp/Nancy Bishop/Diane Dupuis 122, Mafie Walker/Kim Kutsch/Jane Fuller/Bunny Radcliff 127.

Lake Ashton Ladies Niners, Individual Drop Two Worst Holes, Net, Feb. 9: Combo First Flight - Fran Kramer 20, Marilyn Lancaster and Linda Ford tied at 21; Second - Cyndy Berry 16, Carol Gillespie 20, Joan Senecal 23; Green First Flight - Colleen Smith 19, Fran Salb and Mary Cooper tied at 20, Second - Brenda Arant, Diane Struble and Connie Medlin all at 21; Third - Mary Lopez 17, Denise Lacaprucia 20, Donna Butch 21.

Lake Ashton Men's, Front 9 - Scramble/Back 9 - Modified Alternate Shot, Net, Feb. 10: First Flight - Tim Wayt/Dave Wallner 66.3, Bob Plummer/Don Connors 68.8, Jim Williams/Lee VanHorn 69.4; Second - Ron McDonnell/Rolly Geyer 67, Gary Pagel/Mike Gerard 68.5, Les Jacobson/Denis Lussier and Frank Vasquenza/Jim Kutsch tied at 69; Third - Bob Alfano/Harry Krumrie 65.9, Alan Gasner/Paul Fichtman 67.4, Norm Wilderson/Jay Ramalho 70.4; Fourth - Rick Simonetta/Steve Kettells 66, Jim Capra/Mike Lavigna and Paul Guay/Chuck Staines tied at 67; Fifth - Jim Ford/Mark Kennedy 69.3, Fred Smith/Tom Williams 71.1, Jim Simpson/Paul Panone 71.8.

Lake Bess Friday 3 p.m. Men's Scramble, Random Team Draw, Feb. 12: Doug Wilson/Jadon Lansat/Ed Bauer/Gary Shroyer minus 8. Closest to pin: No. 3 - Ed Bauer; No. 7 - Tom Houston.

Lake Bess Tuesday 3 p.m. Men's Scramble, Random Team Draw, Feb. 2:Doug Wilson/Pat Ferrio/Bob Shelton/Steve Saurers minus 8. Closest to pin: No. 3 - Larry Lee; No. 7 - Steve Saurers.

Lakeland Elks Lodge 1291 Monday League, Wedgewood, Feb. 15: A Flight - Ed Carley plus 5 on a match of cards over Dave Norwine and Jerry Bellin, Jack Meister plus 4; B - Carl Hatfield plus 7 on a match of cards over Jerry Giddens, Mark Dillon plus 6, Bob Haskins plus 5. Closest to pin: No. 8 - Fred Ellis (50/50); No. 15 - Jack Meister.

Lakeland Men's Senior, Sandpiper, Feb. 15: A Flight - Greg Holmberg plus 9, Wayne Clark plus 2, Dean Fleming plus 1; B - Terry Richardson plus 9, Bob Capilla plus 8, Pete Casella plus 5; C - Dennis Kann plus 5, Al Hughes plus 4, Frank Casella plus 3. Closest to pin: No. 6 - Mike Wyatt; No. 18 - Greg Holmberg. Low Gross: Greg Holmberg 73.

Ridge Men's, Bartow, Feb. 11: Ric Moots plus 5, Blake Tyler and Elio Hernandez tied at plus 2. Closest to pin: No. 7 and 15 - Dennis Johnston; No. 13 - Raleigh Worsham.

Sandpiper Women's, Feb. 9: A Flight - G. Emigh plus 5 on a match of cards over S. Herring, L. Fox plus 2; B - J. Norfleet plus 10, M. Jenkins plus 5, D. Marks plus 3 on a match of cards; C - S. Nubaum plus 6 on a match of cards over M. Crankshaw, L. Halfpap plus 4. Closest to pin: A - K. Cline; B - M. Jenkins; C - B. Schuetze.

Schalamar Creek Ladies', Quota Points, Feb. 9: First Flight - Linda Liljequist minus 2, Sandra Lancaster and Linda Wolfgang tied at minus 3, Karen Lloyd minus 4; Second - Pam Bartley plus 1, Cathy Sheridan even, Carol Sutton minus 2. Nine-Hole Flight - Dianne Lang, Coby Holowacz and Cynde Johnson all at plus 1.

THE INDIAN LAKE ESTATES GOLF COURSE ANNUAL "ANCHORS AWEIGH" fundraising golf tournament will be held March 20 and is open to the public. The format is a four-person "scratch scramble with a men's division and a mixed division. Registration and putting contest begin at 7:45 a.m. with a 9 a.m. shotgun start. A luncheon will follow the tournament. Entry fee is $35 per player for prizes and lunch plus $25 per player for green fees. Register as a team or a single. Deadline for registration is March 15. Call 863-692-1514 for additional information. CDC COVID-19 guidelines must be followed to participate.

INAUGURAL CROSSED PAWS PET RESCUE BENEFIT SCRAMBLE TOURNAMENT will be held March 27 with a 9 a.m. shotgun start at Schalamar Creek Golf Course, 4500 U.S. 92 East, Lakeland. Proceeds benefit Crossed Paws Pet Rescue building fund. Prizes, 50/50 raffle, long drive and closest to pin contests. $35 members, $45 nonmembers, registration deadline March 20. Box lunch $10; must let pro shop know when you sign up. Sign up as foursome or single. For more information or to register, call Sherry Hand, 925-766-4103.

BARTOW INDIVIDUAL POINTS, Wednesdays, nine holes, make up your own foursome, $17 ($12 green fee and cart), pays all plus scores, night specials in the lounge. Call 863-533-9183.

CLEVELAND HEIGHTS MENS, tee times available 7:30-8:30 a.m. Wednesday through Monday and Friday, groups or individuals welcome, quota points with skins optional, eight to 10 groups now play. Call Paul Boeh at 863-738-4129.

CLEVELAND HEIGHTS TUESDAY WOMENS, every Tuesday, tee times start at 8:30 a.m. Call Shirley Kalck at 863-853-9566.

HAMPTONS TUESDAY MEN'S LEAGUE, accepting new players. Call 844-882-8157 for more information.

HUNTINGTON HILLS TWO-ASIDE, Saturdays, 18-Hole Points Quota. Check in by 8:15 a.m. Contact Terri White at 863-5594082 or eagle-2par@aol.com.

HUNTINGTON HILLS WHY WORRY WEDNESDAYS, Nine-Hole Quota Points, 5:15 p.m. shotgun start. Contact Terri White at 863-559-4082 or eagle-2par@aol.com.

LAKELAND MENS SENIOR GOLF, 7:30 a.m. shotgun starts, Mondays, play against golfers within your handicap. Call Dave Brown at 419-656-5747.

LPGA AMATEUR GOLF ASSOCIATION is looking for women and men to play in weekly Wednesday league and every other Saturday at various courses in the Winter Haven/Lakeland/Orlando and other areas. For more information, email Kathy Mannahan at pjacobs21@tampabay.rr.com.

POLO PARK MENS TUESDAY SCRAMBLE, 7:30 a.m. sign in. Random team draw. 18-Hole. For more information, call Polo Park Pro Shop at 863-424-3341.

POLO PARK MENS SATURDAY SCRAMBLE, 7:30 a.m. sign in. Random team draw. 18-Hole. For more information, call Polo Park Pro Shop at 863-424-3341.

WEDGEWOOD THREE-MAN SCRAMBLE, nine holes; Tuesdays at 5 p.m.; call Marcus at 863-858-4451 by 2:30 p.m. to play.

WEDGEWOOD TWO-ASIDE GAME, 9 a.m. on Wednesdays and Fridays; 18-hole points game with skins and blind draw; call Marcus at 863-858-4451.

WEDGEWOOD MIXED CO-ED SCRAMBLE, 2 p.m. Thursdays. Call Marcus at 863-858-4451 by 1 p.m. to play.

E-mail results of local golf tournaments, aces and upcoming tournaments to mquinn@theledger.com; or mail to Golf News, Ledger Sports Department, P.O. Box 408, Lakeland, Fla., 33802. Include complete scores and league names. Deadline is Monday at 5 p.m.

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Local golf league results, aces and upcoming events - The Ledger

Ron Rudin’s Body Was Found & His Autopsy Revealed Details – Heavy.com

ABC News/Find a GraveMargaret Rudin/Ron Rudin

Ron Rudin was brutally murdered and his body was not found until years later when a fisherman stumbled across his charred remains. His wife, Margaret Rudin, was convicted of murder and served 20 years in prison. She became known as the Black Widow. His full name was Ronald Julian Rudin.

The couple had been married for seven years when Ron Rudin was shot in the back of the head with his own gun. Both Margaret and Ron had been married four times before their wedding. Margaret went on the run when the murder weapon was found in 1996, and she was indicted in 1997. Authorities also said Margaret Rudin tapped her husbands phone, suspecting he was having an affair.

Margaret Rudin, now 77, maintains her innocence. Rudin spoke out in exclusive interviews featured on ABC 20/20. The new episode, Five Weddings and a Murder, airs at 9 p.m. Eastern time Friday, February 21, 2021.

Heres what you need to know:

Ron Rudins body was found about 45 miles from Las Vegas, near the shoreline of a Colorado River Reservoir. Fisherman stumbled upon his remains, which included a skull and some charred bones. A decorative bracelet, which said RON in jewels, was also found in the area.

Prosecutors said at the Black Widow trial Rudin was shot in the head as he slept. They said his body was taken away in a truck, burned and dumped in the desert, according to the Associated Press.

Police determined Rudin was shot multiple times with a .22-caliber gun with a silencer. It was Rons own gun that was used to kill him. He had reported the gun missing just one year after he and Margaret were married. In addition to burning the body, Las Vegas Police and an autopsy determined he had been decapitated, according to the Las Vegas Sun.

Police believe Rudin was after her husbands property, which had an estimated $11 million worth. Police alleged Rudin shot her husband in their bed. They believe she had an accomplice, who was never identified. That person, they believe, helped her put the body into an antique humpback trunk and discard the body in the desert. The remains were found in 1995 at Nelsons Landing near Lake Mojave and the Colorado River.

Ron Rudin was murdered December 18, 1994 when he was 64 years old. He was buried at Saint Paul Lutheran Cemetery in Dieterich, Illinois, according to Find a Grave.

A diver found the weapon used in Ron Rudins murder at the bottom of Lake Mead in 1996. That sent Margaret Rudin on the run, several weeks before she was indicted on murder charges in 1997. She was arrested in Massachusetts in 1999.

Ron Rudin was a millionaire who earned his wealth as a prominent real estate developer in Las Vegas. Margaret Rudin was an antique shop owner and a socialite. She was arrested in Revere, Massachusetts after a tip was called in following a most wanted TV show. She had been living there for a year with a retired firefighter who she met among a group of retirees in Mexico.

I want to be exonerated, she told the Las Vegas Review-Journal. She said she wants a passport, to vote and to be able to do all the things that I was able to do before Ron was murdered.

I did not do it, she added.

READ NEXT: Margaret Rudin Today: Where Is the Black Widow Now in 2021?

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Ron Rudin's Body Was Found & His Autopsy Revealed Details - Heavy.com

Mother Pleas For Publics Help In Hopes It Can Help Police Solve Nearly 19-Year-Old Cold Case Of Sons Murder – CBS Miami

MIAMI (CBSMiami) A mother is appealing for the publics help nearly 19 years after her son was found murdered inside his Kendall condominium, and she says she has never given up hope this case can be solved.

Barbara Brewer tells CBS4s Peter DOench that her son, 34-year-old Paul Duane Young, just meant everything to all of us.

It was a horrible day when his life ended. Now I want to know who did this and why they did it. You can only feel the hurt that his family and friends feel and if you have any information at all, please call somebody or police and tell them, she said.I would like to see this case solved I doubt it will change how I feel because I have lost a son. Hes gone. I will never see him again until I am gone.

Brewer shared a montage of photos with CBS4 that show Youngs passion for sports.

He was an avid mountain biker and other photos show him snowboarding in Breckenridge, Colorado, and surfing at Sebastian Inlet.

He was also a vice president of finance at a Bank of America branch in the Hammocks.

If you wanted to have a child who was almost perfect, he was it. He grew up with a smile on his face and believed in sharing everything. Ive heard people say he would give you the best shirt off of his back if you needed it, said Brewer.

She is also joined by Miami-Dade Police veteran Det. David Denmark, who said, We would like to ask the public to reach back to the year 2002 and recall how they remember Paul Duane Young and see if they remember anything that was out of place or suspicious and if they do to please Miami-Dade police homicide. No detail is too small.

Denmark told DOench that the body of Young was discovered at 10:40 a.m. on Monday, April 1, 2002, and he was last seen by his girlfriend, who he was dating at the time, at 12:30 a.m. on Sunday, March 31 of 2002.

Paul Duane Young was found brutally murdered while inside his residence, said Denmark, at Kings Creek Condominiums. We have persons of interest and they have all been previously identified.

They all said they have no reason why Paul Duane Young was murdered. He was a very good guy and a model employee and liked by many so it gives us a big challenge and there is no clear motive. I would like to solve this because it would bring closure to his family and Paul Duane Young could Rest In Peace.

Anyone with information that can help Miami-Dade Police should call Miami-Dade Crime Stoppers at (305) 471-TIPS (8477).

There is a reward of $5,000.

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Mother Pleas For Publics Help In Hopes It Can Help Police Solve Nearly 19-Year-Old Cold Case Of Sons Murder - CBS Miami

THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER: A Buccaneers connection, and a Super Bowl party that (almost) wasnt – Wicked Local

Beata Cook| Wicked Local

Hi Folks. Once I get an idea for the week's topic, sometimes the words start to flow effortlessly until I realize I'm running out of space. At other times, I have to push myself to get the column ready to hand over to Avis for typing, proofreading, and small edits before it's sent to the editor of the Banner. That's where I find myself today, Monday, Feb. 8.

First of all, yesterday (the day of the Super Bowl, of all days) got all screwed up, which set me up for a very poor night's sleep, and as a consequence I could easily take a nap right now. But time grows short so I shall force myself to continue to follow my trend of thought wherever it might lead and hope my readers aren't overcome by my lethargy.

Back to the annual Super Bowl played by the champion teams of the NFL football season, which was won for many years by our New England Patriots, led by our quarterback, Tom Brady. Tom, at age 43, is considered kind of long in the tooth for a professional football player, but for some unknown reason he opted to go on playing but with a different team. Happily for me, he picked a team with which I feel a sort of connection, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. You see, my younger brother Paul (who died about 16 years ago and to whom I was very devoted) had moved many years ago from Boston with his partner, Ron, to St. Petersburg, Florida. Soon after the move they became fans of the Buccaneers, but Paul's team of choice always remained the Patriots. I still have a stadium blanket which the boys sent me years ago, with the name Buccaneers printed on its pretty orange quilting. I treasure it to this day. My sister Marian, our Aunt Ruth and I spent our yearly winter vacations with Paul and Ron in St. Pete, and therein lies my connection. If Brady felt it necessary to move to another locale with a different team, what better choice than the Tampa Bay Buccaneers?

So it was that I and my nieces Sue and Cindy planned a Super Bowl celebration of our own on game day. Cindy, who works at Stop & Shop, ordered freshly fried chicken wings to be picked up at the designated hour. Our neighbor, Mark Bove, contributed homemade pizza. Our plans were to do our weekly grocery shopping, put the stuff away, pick up the chicken wings and sit down to enjoy the game. Alas, that was not to be!

Was it Robert Burns who said, The best laid plans of mice and men often go awry ?

Disappointment #1: When Cindy arrived, she announced that the machine which fries the Stop & Shop chicken wings had burned out and would need repairs. As an alternative, we decided on frozen chicken wings accompanied by potato skins such as we once devoured at the now- defunct Pucci's. After we got the groceries sorted and put where they belong, we were really looking forward to sitting down with a drink and a piece of Mark's pizza as we watched the opening ceremonies of the Super Bowl.

Then came Disappointment #2. It was just about this time that I lost my picture on my Direct TV hookup. Since this has happened in the past during bad weather, I wasn't overly concerned.

Usually when it goes down, the screen delivers a message stating that the satellite dish is not relaying a signal but that they are searching and the connection would be restored shortly. But that's not what happened this time!

Susie got in touch with Direct TV customer service, and though she is much more experienced with technology than I am, after a series of unplug this, plug in that she was still unable to get a picture. Frustrated, Cindy and I had a piece of Mark's pizza but Susie did not. She said she didn't feel well and wasn't hungry. Because Cindy had an early work schedule the next day, Susie put the frozen wings and potato skins in the oven for Cindy to take home for her supper and then continued the hopeless task of getting a picture on the TV. She got so involved she forgot about the food in the oven, and when I reminded her, it was too late. The food was dry and tasteless, but before Cindy left for home she gamely ate hers anyway and said that it wasn't too bad.

What she deemed not too bad was Disappointment #3 for me, as far as I was concerned.

With the game well underway, Susie finally located a radio station on which she could follow the action and scores. Because football is such a visual game and my hearing is so impaired, there really isn't much pleasure in a radio broadcast. But when we turned it on the Buccaneers were in the lead after a couple of touchdowns by Rob Gronkowski, also a former Patriots player.

Finally, even better news arrived when Susie noticed that a light usually showing on the converter box wasn't shining. With that she started fooling around with plugs and outlets once again when, lo and behold, the screen suddenly came to life, informing us that they had almost located the signal on my disc and we should be connected in a few minutes. It was now halftime and I was hungry and tired, but we were able to see the last half of the game as well as the celebration when the Buccaneers handily won the Super Bowl! Brady will get his seventh ring.

It was then that my thoughts turned to my deceased loved ones, Paul, Marian, and friend Ron who have all gone on to another place, but I was able to join them in spirit as I shouted,

YIPPEE!

We won another Super Bowl. Not only did Tom Brady win one for the Buccaneers, but I finished my column with no space to spare!

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THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER: A Buccaneers connection, and a Super Bowl party that (almost) wasnt - Wicked Local

Fact Check: Did the Biden Administration Remove the White House Petitioning System? – Newsweek

At his inauguration, President Joe Biden pledged to restore democracy and declared that the will of the people had been heard. But his detractors are now pointing to an allegedly missing page from the White House website as evidence against these proclamations.

"We the People," an online petitioning system launched by President Barack Obama's administration, is said to have been removed without explanation.

On Tuesday, the Ron Paul Institute, responding to an article published by the anti-imperialist website antiwar.com, decried the Biden administration for allegedly taking down a White House petitioning system that allowed citizens to start campaigns. Once the campaigns reached at least 100,000, the White House was required to respond.

"It appears that the 'We the People' petition system has been taken off the White House website," the Ron Paul Institute posted to its blog. "This is a terrible event, and it must be publicized, and Biden must be made to reverse this decision."

In 2011, the Obama White House debuted a new section of whitehouse.gov where users could create, browse and sign online petitions that, under most circumstances, would require a government response once they reached 100,000 signatures.

Criminal proceedings and many federal processes were exempt from this, and the platform functioned mainly as a public relations tool for citizens to express themselves and communicate their concerns to the White House. Many petitions were created tongue-in-cheek, and some might remember a playful 2012 petition for the federal government to create a Death Star as an economy-driving enterprise.

When President Donald Trump took office in 2017, his administration removed the "We the People" page, sparking outrage and media response. The Washington Post reported that several petitions demanding Trump release his tax returns and resign reached well over 100,000 signatures before the page was removed with a note saying it was undergoing maintenance.

Eventually, the petitioning system returned, but the page disappeared the day of Biden's inauguration. Previous links redirect to the White House homepage.

The White House did not respond to requests for comment Wednesday regarding the reason for the page's removal or whether the petitioning system would return. Archives of the page from previous administrations still are accessible.

True.

The "We the People" system is nowhere to be found on the White House website. The reason behind its removal has not been released.

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Fact Check: Did the Biden Administration Remove the White House Petitioning System? - Newsweek

Bill Gates: Im not trying to take anything away from Greta Thunberg, but… – The Irish Times

After putting $100m into Covid research, the billionaire is taking on the climate crisis. And first he has some bones to pick with his fellow campaigners

Bill Gates appears via video conference Microsoft Teams, not Zoom, obviously from his office in Seattle, a large space with floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking Lake Washington. Its a gloomy day outside, and Gates is, somewhat eccentrically, positioned a long way from the camera, behind a large, kidney-shaped desk; his communications manager sits off to one side.

If one had to stage, for the purposes of symbolism, a tableau of a man for whom a distance of 5,000km between callers still constitutes too intimate a setting, it might be this. As a way to start, says Gatess aide, would it be helpful for Bill to make a couple of comments about why he wrote his new book? It is helpful, and Im not ungrateful, but this is not how interviews typically commence.

There is an urge towards deference, when speaking to Gates, that attends few other people of commensurate fame. Celebrity is one thing, but wealth true, former-richest-man-in-the-world wealth is something else entirely; one has a sense of being granted an audience with the Great Man, a fact made more surreal by his famously muted persona.

The 65-year-old cofounder of Microsoft has the lofty, mildly long-suffering air of a man accustomed to being the smartest guy in the room, leavened by wry amusement and interrupted, on the evidence of past interviews, by the occasional peevish outburst most memorably in 2014, when Jeremy Paxman, as host of Newsnight, on BBC Two, questioned him about Microsofts alleged tax avoidance. (I think thats about as incorrect a characterisation of anything Ive ever heard, he said, practically squirming in his seat with annoyance.)

Unlike the Elon Musks or Larry Ellisons of this world, however, Gates is perceived to be sensible, uxorious, modest, vowing not to ruin his children with boundless inheritance or to waste energy trying to send things to Mars. In the late 1990s, the US government brought an antitrust suit against Microsoft, accusing it of maintaining a monopoly in the PC market; a final settlement in 2001 overturned an earlier order for the company to be broken up. Since then, Gates has enjoyed a reputation as the Good Billionaire, dispensing a fortune through his foundation and overshadowing what his detractors would say is his biggest shortcoming: his unquestioning belief in progress as a function of capitalist growth.

All of these aspects come together in Gates new book, How to Avoid a Climate Disaster, which, as he tells me, grew out of two things: his interest in the sciences and what struck him as an irresistible challenge the fiendishly difficult problem of how to further global development while reducing emissions. For the past few decades, much of Gatess focus has been on expanding access to electricity in the remotest parts of the world. And yet, he says, the idea of adding new electricity capacity you cant just go build coal plants. And understanding how expensive it needs to be, and how this is going to work, had me doing a lot of reading.

Theres another, greater obstacle to reaching zero emissions, which is the political challenge part of which involves climate activists limiting their exposure to accusations of hypocrisy. Gates loves private jets; he calls them his guilty pleasure. He loves hamburgers and eating grapes year-round.

A few weeks after we speak, it is reported that he is involved in a bid to buy Signature Aviation, which handles ground services for 1.6 million private jet flights a year. Today he says, I get sustainable aviation fuel that I use when I fly, and mentions another, vaguely futuristic-sounding service: Ive paid to offset my carbon footprint theres this group Climeworks that does direct air capture up in Iceland.

On the subject of imported food, he says: Well, growing food locally is often worse, because youre putting things in greenhouses that have an insane climate imprint. Im not the only one who eats out-of-season food, as far as I know. But if thats peoples main objection and theyll adopt my plan, then Gates smiles, in a rather glittering way Ill cede my grape-eating.

For Gates, this focus on grapes and private jet travel is, relatively speaking, like rearranging deckchairs on the Titanic. What months of the year do I have to stop eating hamburgers? he says sardonically. I dont need the tomato. Or the lettuce. Just the bun and the meat will do. There is no suggestion that using direct air capture to offset ones flights, were such a service even affordable for regular people, would make the slightest dent in the problem. But by using a private jet, Gates makes it easier for others to undermine him. Its not, one imagines, the strongest tool in his skill set, to play dumb in order to win lesser mortals over.

Instead, what he does is bombard us with data and expertise. His book encompasses wisdom from sources that range from less well-known climate scientists, such as Vaclav Smil and Ken Caldeira, to John D Cox, author of Weather for Dummies, which, says Gates, remains one of the greatest books about weather ever written.

Yet Gatess book is compulsively readable. His ambition was to cut through the noise and give consumers better tools for understanding what works, an ambition he meets admirably. Its more than that, however. Gates can get an audience with anyone, can marshal almost limitless resources, and is dogged in the detail. The result particularly in the wake of the Trump presidency is thrilling.

It is also, occasionally, comic. I cant deny being a rich guy with an opinion, he writes, with a nod to the flipside of his visionary status, that of the despised billionaire flogging a hobby horse. And there is a nerdy bathos to some of his passions. In one episode, Gates takes his 15-year-old son, Rory, around a power plant on a family holiday, something he bills as a jolly day out. Im in awe of physical infrastructure, he explains.

The depressing part of the book is its account of the challenge ahead, which Gates presents as extremely urgent and, in order to avoid defeatism, also just about doable. He points to a headline figure: 51 billion. This is the amount of greenhouses gas, in tons, emitted globally each year, which we have to get down to net zero by 2050. The first step towards this is understanding what were dealing with. Lets have more literate climate articles, so people can understand if its a breakthrough thats a big deal or a small deal.

For example, the transport industry, on which so much attention is focused, accounts for only 16 per cent of global emissions which is why, as air travel has ground to a halt, greenhouse gases have gone down by only 5 per cent or so. As Gates points out, the future of car travel lies in electric vehicles; but if the electricity comes from coal-fired power plants, the switch is of limited value. Cars are a minor part of the problem compared with the juggernaut of emissions generated by the global cement and steel industries.

Most people dont understand what cement is, says Gates, igniting with interest. And I spent literally weeks understanding why its so miraculous, and could we use less of it? The same goes for meat production. To understand, okay, what is the ratio of the input of the calories of the cow to the output? What are cow genetics? Cow burps and farts account for around 4 per cent of global emissions; without striking beef from our diets, how can those emissions be offset or eliminated?

Like a lot of people, Ive indulged in somewhat magical thinking around this, dutifully recycling my plastic every week while assuming that, when push comes to shove, the US government will devote the entire annual defence budget to climate control and invent a shield or something. And Gates covers some cool, sci-fi type innovations, most of them to do with those direct air capture technologies, which suck (not the scientific term) greenhouse gases out of the atmosphere. There is a solar-powered dehumidifier to get drinking water out of air, and a technology for storing heat in molten salt.

There is geoengineering, which may one day be capable of reducing the amount of sunlight hitting the worlds surface by distributing extremely fine particles into the upper atmosphere or using a salt spray to brighten clouds. But these innovations are cripplingly expensive and imprecise. If you meddle with clouds over the US, there is no guarantee the temperature in China wont go down.

The biggest gesture most powerful authorities are willing to make involves divesting from polluting industries. Last year, New York state pledged to divest its 186 billion pension fund from fossil-fuel companies. This strikes Gates as wholly inadequate; it diverts the focus from more urgent concerns, such as finding a carbon-neutral energy source to power the electricity grid. Itd be tragic to have this whole generation behind the cause, and then you just do the easy stuff like divesting securities. You can say, Okay, I dont want any more of those evil oil company stocks. Yay! Well, how many tons [of carbon] did you avoid by doing that?

The same goes for everybody vowing to eat less meat. I mean, these are good things in fact, buying Beyond Burgers [a plant-based meat company that Gates invests in] actually drives demand, which will get the quality up and the rate premium down, so consumer behaviour is important. But unless you replace steel, its a joke. Just forcing companies to report their CO2 is a good thing; but when you open that steel company report, youre going to go, Oh, this is shocking, they have emissions! And what? Are we not going to build buildings in India to provide people with basic shelter?

If this was all about a 20 per cent reduction, it should be pretty easy. Rich countries could reduce our cars and big houses, and the ridiculous amounts of meat we eat by 20 per cent. The thing that makes climate so hard is that its not about a 20 per cent reduction its about getting it to zero. So things like [changing] mass transit so you have 20 per cent less miles driven in the city, that doesnt go anywhere.

The only thing that would neutralise the climate impact of public transport is if every vehicle were powered by a zero-emission fuel. One solution Gates cites is clean hydrogen. It doesnt yet exist in a widespread usable form, but were the technology to advance to create super, super cheap and totally clean hydrogen, that helps a lot of industrial processes. You could use that to make fertiliser in a clean way, to help make steel in a clean way. That alone would help with about 30 per cent of emissions, which is pretty amazing to have one thing that can do 30 per cent.

If there is a credibility gap in listening to Gates on this subject, it comes from the suspicion that he lives in a world so far removed from the rest of us as to raise large blind spots. Its a small thing, but in a 2014 Rolling Stone interview, Gates mentioned a lunch with Charles Koch, the libertarian billionaire who made huge sums from the oil business and for decades lobbied to reduce US environmental regulations. Hes a very nice person, Gates said in that interview, and he has this incredible business track record. Koch, along with his late brother David, spent decades funding climate deniers. Gatess regard for him seems vested entirely in his success as a businessman; no matter how philanthropic, at some level the billionaire class is loyal primarily to itself.

But there is no denying that Gates is alert to inequity. Its the rich countries that did all the emissions, he says, but its these poor countries [that will suffer] . The injustice of this on a global basis is pretty mind-blowing. Still, he is often at odds with other climate campaigners, particularly those on the left. Of the Green New Deal, the proposal backed by Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez that raises the goal of carbon neutrality in a decade, he is flatly dismissive.

Well, its a fairytale. Its like saying vaccines dont work thats a form of science denialism. Why peddle fantasies to people? This seems a little harsh, and one suspects that Gatess vehemence is powered by a broader disapproval of Ocasio-Cortezs politics. But his point is that there isnt the time, money or political will to reconfigure the energy industry in a decade; by encouraging an impossible goal, you doom yourself to short-termist measures that prove insufficient.

How helpful does he consider protest movements like Extinction Rebellion, with their habit of shutting down busy thoroughfares at rush hour? Well, what we need is innovation. So if theyre really strategic about what street they cut off, and some poor guy is blocked in traffic and he sits there and says: God, Ive got to figure out a way to make steel [carbon neutral]. I was being lazy, but now that Im sitting here in traffic, Im going to go home tonight and figure how to do this. Then its a very direct connection between blocking the traffic and solving climate change.

He smiles sarcastically. I dont mean to make fun of it in a way their passion is valuable. But its going to manifest in some ways that arent that constructive. So we need to channel that energy in a way that takes 51 billion and moves it towards zero.

And Greta Thunberg? To some degree the resonance of the issue if climate change wasnt important, she wouldnt be on the front page. I quite like Gates for this. One can imagine him having a pop at Malala Yousafzai, too; popular sentimentality is not something that interests him. Im not trying to take anything away from her. And every movement needs iconic leaders who speak, and thats a pretty good thing. But theres probably some teenager who believes that the Rohingya should be treated better, and another who thinks were not investing enough in good education. So the world has sought her out to speak in this clear, almost innocent way about a cause that were trying to orchestrate our energy around, and say, hey, can we maintain this and convince people to make sacrifices? And how big do these sacrifices need to be? So Im glad: you cant have a movement without high-visibility figures. I hope shes not messing up her education. She seems very clever.

Well, hang on, I say: youre a college drop-out yourself.

Thats true. Teaching yourself stuff works very well for some people, and probably for her.

Bill Gates dropped out of Harvard in 1975, to form Microsoft with Paul Allen. For the next 20 years, he focused solely on building the company; by 1996, it had a market cap of $100 billion. Gates, meanwhile, became the worlds richest man in 1995, a spot he held intermittently until he was bumped by Jeff Bezos in 2018.

Its tempting to read the Gates aesthetic plain, functional, allergic to anything not in service to his goals as the key to his success, and at least as important as his coding genius. These days, according to Forbes, his personal fortune is around 98 billion. But it wasnt until he turned 40, he says, that he started to think about philanthropy, even though it was always there in his upbringing.

His father, Bill Gates snr, was a lawyer who became instrumental in the setting up of the Gates Foundation. His mother, Mary, who worked on various charitable boards, gave a toast at Gatess wedding to Melinda, saying, From those to whom much is given, much is expected. So yes, saysGates, The idea that the success of Microsoft is so much money for one individual that giving that back to society in some constructive way might be something I might end up doing slowly but surely dawned on me.

He was mentored in this by his friend Warren Buffett. Gates is still annoyed by something CNN founder Ted Turner said of both men, years ago, claiming that we wanted to be higher on some wealth list. And honestly we werent hyper-focused on it.

The subject of pandemics is one that has obsessed him for two decades, going back to the foundations initial 618 million ($750 million) donation to the Gavi Vaccine Alliance in 1999 and culminating in 2014 when he gave a Ted talk on the international communitys failure to prepare for the next big outbreak. Gates has donated more than 80million to Covid research, and on CNN before Christmas hepredicted that the next four to six months could be the worst of the epidemic. Will he wait his turn for the vaccine, like everyone else? Thats right. Im a healthy 65-year-old, and Ill delegate it to the states. So probably in March or April, they will film me taking the vaccine.(Since we spoke, Gates has tweeted that he has now been vaccinated, earlier than he expected.)

That he is filmed is important. Gates has become the focus for online conspiracy theories about how he created the virus, and is now using the vaccine to implant microchips. For months, he has been batting away these theories; in an interview with Reuters in January, he repeated with weary finality how crazy and evil it all was.

Does he think the vaccine roll-out in the United States, which has been fairly chaotic, could have been better handled? Its incredibly complex, especially when trying to do so at the scale and speed required. For context, Indias campaign to give 400 million children the measles rubella vaccine took over two years with a full year of planning. National leadership is crucial: I am hopeful the incoming administration can help give that.

Meanwhile, Gates points out that the experience of the pandemic bears strong connections to what will happen if we dont address the climate emergency. We rely on government to look out for the future, so that even if something unlikely shows up, people arent dying and the economy isnt wrecked. And so for the pandemic, despite many people, including myself, saying that we ought to get prepared literally the title of my Ted talk was Were not ready the government let us down. And so with climate changewe want government to look ahead and do the right things.

It is a much more complicated landscape, in which the single most useful thing individuals can do, in Gatess view, is to educate themselves, the better to judge the impact of various solutions. Theres no simple thing like get a vaccine and the nightmare ends. Youre talking about replacing every steel and cement factory, everything you do with electricity and transportation, even food. Its way broader, and the time to do these large-scale things is way longer.

One of the more mind-blowing facts Gates shares in his book is that during the ice age the global temperature was a mere six degrees cooler than it is today; and when the dinosaurs were around, only four degrees hotter. So, as climate deniers love to say, whats the big deal if things warm up a bit?

That was confusing me a little bit, Gates says. We have these huge ranges of temperature, there have been forests at the south pole, so hey, how bad can this be? But understand that its the rate of change; that the speed with which the CO2 is going up is so fast, that evolution cant help. If this was happening over tens of millions of years, instead of 100 years, then the Earth could adjust. He pauses to consider another terrifying detail. The fact there is so much water in the Antarctic ice, and that it can raise the sea level by over 100ft that is mind-blowing, too.

If he were 30 years younger, would he consider not having kids? Rich countries are worried about shrinking. So no, I wouldnt say to somebody, please dont have kids. We will make the world a reasonable place to live in and so kids will be fine. He thinks for a moment. It is weird that in 2050, Ill be 95 years old. Will I live to see this play out, in terms of what works and what doesnt work? This is why you have to engage the young.

Gatess method of engaging his children is in line with his own interests, which his son, Rory, now 21, passionately shares. (His daughters, Phoebe and Jennifer, aged 18 and 24, seem to have been spared the holiday day trips.) The history of steel goes back some 4,000 years, says Gates dreamily, and mentions again how much he loves concrete. Did Rory never complain about being dragged off to look at a factory? He has a deep amount of curiosity, says Gates. There were a few like going to the sewage plant that were fairly smelly. Going to where they process garbage, and the factory where they make toilet paper and paper towels, that also had a bad smell. Although for both of us that was pretty interesting.

Gates considers himself naive about the physical world, and is fascinated by how things work. Were both a bit like that. So it was like: how are things really made? This guy Smil [the energy academic Vaclav Smil] writes all these books about this, such fascinating books, but they never sell. People just take the fact that you flip the switch and the light goes on for granted, and behind that are such unbelievable innovations. Likewise the creation of steel and how cheap all that stuff is. Seeing it directly, I highly recommend that. I want to see tours of steel plants go up dramatically.

There is an assumption, I suggest, that anyone in Gatess wealth category has a personal contingency plan: a secret rocket ship, say, or a fortified island, or at the very leastan extremely well-stocked bunker. No, I dont. In my lifetime, the weather will be worse, but its mostly at the equator. Im not a survivalist.

Instead his version of survivalism is to fund innovation. Im putting money into carbon capture and nuclear fission. The [Gates] foundation does what we call adaptation work, which is improving seeds. (This is so crops can survive drought and floods in the zones most affected by the climate crisis.) He is also investing in the development of batteries that could, for example, power Tokyo for three days if a cyclone knocked out the power. (It would cost about 330billion.)

Is there any single area of innovation that, if we got it right, might save us? The basic answer is no, says Gates. The scale of the threat is so all-encompassing, so demanding of radical changes to transport, buildings, industry, land use and political will, that there is no single breakthrough that can solve all those things.

There are, he says, a couple that are very high on the list. If there is something talismanic about Gates, and the faith we have in our billionaires and geniuses to magic us out of this hole, he isnt here to encourage it. But if you only get the top ones on the list, he says, with a kind of terrifying calmness, youre in deep, deep, deep trouble. Guardian

Bill Gatess How to Avoid a Climate Disaster: The Solutions We Have and the Breakthroughs We Need is published by Allen Lane

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Bill Gates: Im not trying to take anything away from Greta Thunberg, but... - The Irish Times

FREE Metro Exodus next-gen/PC upgrades go 4K 60fps with full ray tracing and more – 9to5Toys

Free Metro Exodus upgrades are on the way for next-generation consoles, but we now have details on the complete upgrade the 4A Engine is getting to support them. Metro Exodus a somewhat under-appreciated first person shooter with elements of survivalism, stealth, and post-apocalyptic crafting is getting some serious visual upgrades on PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series S/X consoles along with the freshly-announced Metro Exodus PC Enhanced Edition. A game that was already oozing with atmosphere and even visual story-telling to some degree, 4A games is completely overhauling its game engine to realize a fully Ray Traced experience on next-gen. consoles and high-end PC. Head below for more details.

The third installment in the unique post-apocalyptic Metro series, Exodus more open-world like formula initially released back in 2019. Players finally flee the confines of the Moscow Metro to set off on a continent-spanning journey aboard a locomotive known as the Aurora. The Aurora acts as your entry to various open-world like spaces and adds an interesting wrinkle to what was already a very compelling experience. However, everything is about to get even more immersive with the Free Metro Exodus upgrades and PC Enhanced Edition.

According to 4A, on PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X, the upgraded version of Metro Exodus will see a number of optimizations, upgrades, and new features to the Ray Traced Global Illumination and Emissive Lighting that [it] pioneered with the original release. The team has built an all-new Fully Ray Traced Lighting Pipeline to make this a reality while implementing an upgraded version of its Temporal Reconstruction technology to further boost resolution, visual detail, and performance.

What does that all mean? Well, the free Metro Exodus upgrades for PS5 and Series X will run at 4K 60 frames per second with full Ray Traced lighting throughout. And as you can see in the imagery above, it looks fantastic. But its not just visual upgrades we are getting here. Gamers can also expect to see what 4A calls dramatically reduced loading times by way of leveraging PS5 and Series X SSD storage optimizations, 4K texture packs, and some platform-specific enhancements:

Platform specific features including spatial audio and controller latency improvements on Xbox, and support for the haptic features of the PlayStation 5 Dual Sense controller anyone whos frantically tried to pump up the pressure on their Tikhar in the middle of a pitched battle will be able to imagine the kind of thing were aiming for!

The Series S version is, unsurprisingly, targeting 1080p with 60fps and ray tracing.

Free Metro Exodus upgrades continue with the PC Enhanced Edition as well. 4A says it needs to deliver this version as a separate product it is not a simple patch to the base game. Andinstead will be offering it as an extra entitlement to all existing Metro Exodus PC players on the Epic Games Store, Steam, and GoG. It too makes use of full ray tracing technology, but takes things up a notch with Advanced Ray Traced Reflections and support for DLSS 2.0 on NVIDIA hardware.

There are no dates available here yet, but the free Metro Exodus upgrades will be available on consoles (Xbox Smart Delivery included) and PC via the Enhanced Edition sometime this year and later this spring, respectively.

These free Metro Exodus upgrades are great for fans of the series who have upgraded to next or what is now current-generation hardware. But the real win here is for new players who havent given the pneumatic weapons, terrifying nuclear monsters, and story arch a look just yet. Just keep in mind, it might make sense to score a last-generation version for cheap and then get the upgrade when it comes available later this year.

Be sure to dive into our games/apps deal hub for all of the best price drops across every platform, and dont forget about the ongoing Steam Lunar New Year game sale.

Subscribe to the 9to5Toys YouTube Channel for all of the latest videos, reviews, and more!

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FREE Metro Exodus next-gen/PC upgrades go 4K 60fps with full ray tracing and more - 9to5Toys

This is the first image taken by NASAs Perseverance Mars rover. Now the hunt for life begins. – MIT Technology Review

NASAs Perseverance rover has landed safely on Mars. The spacecraft survived its journey through the Martian atmosphere and made a soft touchdown at Jezero crater.Shortly after landing, it sent back this picture from the surface using its Hazard Avoidance Cameras, which it will use when on the move. The image is partially obscured by a dust cover.

What happened: Perseverance began its descent into the Martian atmosphere Thursday afternoon, a process affectionately called the seven minutes of terror. The spacecraft survived scorching temperatures thanks to its heat shield. Its parachute deployed without a hitch, the rover was able to locate and navigate toward a safe landing spot, and the descent apparatus lowered the spacecraft down to the surface. NASA confirmed a successful touchdown at 3:55 p.m. US Eastern time. During its descent, Perseverance went from traveling at 12,000 miles per hour to just 1.7 mph in seven minutes.

Because of the distance between Earth and Mars, communication between NASA mission control and the spacecraft is delayed by 11 minutes. That means the entire landing process had to be accomplished autonomously. Onboard systems tracked the surface for hazards during descent and steered the rover away from any threats.

NASA

Whats it doing on Mars? Perseverances predecessorsSojourner, Spirit, Opportunity, and Curiosityled to compelling revelations of what Mars currently looks like and what it once was. Scientists learned that the planet was once a warm planet teeming with lakes and rivers, and that its home to complex organic matter. Together, these key ingredients suggest Mars could have been habitable to microbial life in the ancient past.

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This is the first image taken by NASAs Perseverance Mars rover. Now the hunt for life begins. - MIT Technology Review

Space Foundation Discovery Center hosts Mars Week as NASAs Perseverance rover set to land Thursday – FOX21News.com

COLORADO SPRINGS Its a journey months in the making and now NASAs Mars rover Perseverance is preparing to land on the red planet, and the Space Foundations Discovery Center is celebrating the event with activities and events for all.

Perseverance rover is set to reach Mars on Feb. 18 around 2 p.m., but that will only be possible if the rover survives what NASAs dubbed the seven minutes of terror.

The last time we sent a rover like Perseverance to Mars was in 2012 when Curiosity landed, Curator for Space Foundations Discovery Center Rachel English said.

Perseverance will have virtually the same landing as Curiosity. But there is only about a 50% chance this landing will be successful. If it is, Perseverance will work to determine whether life ever existed on Mars.

Its going to be doing some incredible work in Jezero crater, where its landing, to search for signs of microbial life on Mars, English added. So itll tell us a lot about the history of Mars as a planet from a geological standpoint, from a climate standpoint, and also, you know, we might find some cool fossils.

Its novel technologies that are enabling the next leaps of exploration: landing with more precision and safely, learn how to make oxygen from CO2 out of the atmosphere and more, NASAs Associate Administrator For Science Thomas Zurbuchen explained.

Whether the mission is successful or not, the Discovery Center is celebrating all week long!

Upcoming Events:

English added, We realize that everyone is getting a little bit of screen fatigue, and we work really hard here at the discovery center to make sure that everything is clean, fun, and safe.

The great part about space exploration is that even if we fail, we still learn.

Failure is one of our greatest teachers as scientists and engineers, so no matter what happens on Thursday, were really excited, English said.

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Space Foundation Discovery Center hosts Mars Week as NASAs Perseverance rover set to land Thursday - FOX21News.com

The Quest to Live on Mars: Could Humans Really Survive? – Interesting Engineering

The challenge of building a settlement on Mars is daunting, but it's beginning to feel less alien every day. While plans to get us there have multiplied as additional nations enter Martian orbit private aerospace firms have also set their eyes on the Red Planet.

The quest to settle Mars is on, but what are the obstacles to building a Martian colony?

NASA's Artemis program will put humans on the surface of the moon for the first time in decades by 2024 with aims to establish sustainable exploration by the end of the 2020s. Much of what the agency learns from living and working on the moon will prepare it for the "next giant leap" of humanity: landing astronauts on Mars.

The Space Launch System (SLS) and Orion are crucial to NASA's aims to explore deep space beyond the moon. While there, astronauts will test novel instruments, tools, and equipment to advance human interests on Mars. It's here the agency will unfold new human habitats, technologies, and life support systems to inform the pursuit of building self-sustaining outposts far away from Earth.

Sometime in the future, NASA plans to send humans to Mars. But for now, the agency is still in the preparation stage sending robotic exploration missions like the Perseverance rover to develop the technology to sustain a human presence on the Red Planet.

CEO and Founder of SpaceX Elon Musk aims to use the Starship rocket to launch what are easily the most ambitious plans for colonizing Mars. He wants his company to mass-produce Starship which is designed to ferry up to 100 people.

"Building 100 Starships/year gets to 1,000 in 10 years or 100 megatons/year or maybe around 100k people per Earth-Mars orbital sync," tweeted Musk. And by "orbital sync," he means the period during which Earth and Mars are nearly aligned, with a minimum transit time.

In other words, Musk envisions unspeakably large fleets of Starships departing in these periods every 26 months. "Loading the Mars fleet into Earth orbit, then 1,000 ships depart over ~30 days every 26 months. Battlestar Galactica..." added Musk in another tweet. The ideal operational life for Starships would be 20 to 30 years.

The goal, of course, is to build a gigantic colony on Mars and effectively turn humanity into a multiplanet species. According to Musk, this is why he founded SpaceX in 2002, and also why he has raised unconscionable sums of money.

In 2017, Musk claimed his Starship ambitions for Mars could allow a city of one million people on Mars within the next century. A year ago, a Twitter follower of Musk's asked him: "So a million people [on the Red Planet] by 2050?"

Musk's succinct reply: "Yes."

Obviously, this is easier said than done.

However ambitious his plans for Mars, it's not irrational to question the timelines Musk has tweeted. Neither he nor NASA has developed concrete, proven plans of how to build domes on Mars under which humans could breathe and live.

While somewhere near the poles of the Red Planet is the ideal location for building a permanent settlement, SpaceX hasn't announced or possibly even developed the architecture for building a self-sustaining habitat on Mars.

Moving back a step, Starship itself has yet to be tested in outer space (though this could happen later this year), let alone on the moon or Mars. But once there, it should be able to take off without a booster rocket provided enough rocket fuel is stored on Mars (which everyone is still figuring out how to create on the Red Planet).

In 2019, the other tech billionaire and founder of Blue Origin declared his plans to colonize space beginning with the moon.

"We're going to build a road to space," said Bezos during a press conference in Washington, D.C., according to an ABC News report. While the current Amazon CEO wasn't sure how to build them, there are "certain gates, certain precursors" to colonizing space, and Bezos wants Blue Origin to lead.

"It's time to go back to the moon, this time to stay," said Bezos during a long and imprecise monologue about space. But considering the early stage of his aerospace company, it still looks like Blue Origin is trailing behind SpaceX.

The Orbital Assembly Corporation recently announced plans to design and build a habitable "space hotel" in low-Earth orbit with at least two prototypes to simulate generating artificial gravity up to the level one would feel on Mars.

The completed project called Voyager Station will serve as a luxury space hotel, but also as a scientific orbital platform where researchers can experiment and study the effects of sub-nominal gravity on human bodies.

"We have lots of data in zero-G, we have lots of data on 1 G, but what about in between?" asked Shawna Pandya, medical advisor for OAC, rhetorically. "In a seminal 2017 paper fromNaturecalled Artificial Gravity agencies came together to analyze how the human body would react to partial-Earth gravity."

"We offer solutions to these questions in a place that's as convenient as low-Earth orbit," said Pandya.

One day the company of NASA veterans could build a similar platform in orbit of Mars and create a waypoint for weary pilgrims of the Earth-Mars transit. But it still needs to test its concept of robotic construction in space, develop a way to transfer a space station to Mars, or build one from Martian resources.

China recently put a spacecraft in orbit around Mars for the first time called Tianwen-1. The craft will detach a lander, which will attempt a landing on Mars and send a rover out onto the Martian surface.

However, the reason China's government gave for the country's interest in Mars suggests it may have bigger plans for the Red Planet: "If we do not go there now even though we can, then we will be blamed by our descendants," said Ye Peijian, senior aerospace engineer and head of China's lunar exploration program, according toThe Daily Beast. "If others go there, then they will take over, and you will not be able to go even if you want to. This is reason enough."

While China has yet to develop (or perhaps, share) concrete plans to colonize Mars, it seems the concern that other entities or nations could limit the country's ability to do so in the future serves as motivation to try.

Russia has proposed several plans to put humans on Mars from the now-defunct Soviet Union's plans to launch a six-cosmonaut crew to live on Mars for 900 days in 1975, to Russia's 2002 aim to land humans on Mars by 2015, and then another announcement in 2018 with aims for a 2019 landing on the Red Planet.

Despite these repeated announcements and delays, Roscosmos the Russian space agency maintains that Mars is the most preferable planet to colonize. "The studies of the Sun show that it is getting hotter while the temperature on Venus and Mars is growing slowly and this is one of the reasons why Mars looks, perhaps, most preferable today from the prospect of terraforming," said Roscosmos' Executive Director for Long-Term Programs and Science Alexander Bloshenko in a TASS interview.

However, Russia still needs to develop (or share) plans for traveling, landing, and living on Mars before it can think of terraforming. And while it has adamantly disagreed with ideas (like Musk's) about terraforming the Red Planet with nuclear explosions the idea of terraforming itself is still highly theoretical, and could take centuries.

The United Arab Emirates also recently put a spacecraft in orbit around Mars. Called "Hope," it's the first step in a very long-term plan for the Arab nation to recruit and send astronauts to Mars. The mission called Mars 2117 will purportedly involve both Earth-bound and interplanetary steps. But judging from the name of the mission, it will almost certainly not be the first entity to land on Mars.

There are many plans to settle Mars, from nearly every space-faring country and private entity. But the architecture to build a human colony on Mars is still in the very early stages for all of them with SpaceX the sole entity actively performing test launches on a vehicle designed to make a landing. But until a new generation of space-worthy habitats, resource infrastructure, means to generate rocket fuel, and a proven landing vehicle are concrete realities, it's difficult to say for certain when humans will be ready to colonize Mars.

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The Quest to Live on Mars: Could Humans Really Survive? - Interesting Engineering

Why are there so many missions to Mars? – The Economist

The planet offers hope for the existence of extraterrestrial life, and a chance for countries on Earth to show off

Feb 19th 2021

MARS IS AWASH with alien technology. On February 18th NASAs Perseverance rover landed in a crater called Jezero, near the planets equator, after travelling 470m kilometres over seven months. The United Arab Emirates Hope orbiter has been circling since February 9th. Chinas Tianwen-1 entered the planets orbit a day later, and its lander and rover will attempt to touch down sometime in May or June. There were six operational satellites in orbit when Hope arrived; NASAs Curiosity rover and InSight lander, which arrived in 2012 and 2018, respectively, are also sending back information from the planets surface. Why are there so many Mars missions and what do countries that send them hope to achieve?

In the late 1800s Percival Lowell, an American astronomer, fixed a telescope on Mars and observed a network of long straight lines that he believed to be canals built by an alien civilisation. In the second half of the 20th century, orbiters circling the planet returned far more detailed data about its atmosphere and surface, putting an end to the theory that a race of Martians had existed. But subsequent missions did raise new questions about alien life. They showed that Mars was once more like Earth. Streams, river valleys, basins and deltas on the planets surface suggest there may have been water covering its northern hemisphere. Orbiters, landers and rovers have set out to explore the planets topography and probe its interior for decades in the hopes of revealing whether microbial life might have existed in the pastand whether it still exists today.

There have been roughly 50 years of Mars missions before Perseverance. NASA was the first to land a craft successfully on its surface, in 1976. The latest flurry of activity is down to two things: new opportunities to answer questions about life beyond Earth, and astropolitical grandstanding. Americas rover will study the planets rock record and look for chemical traces of ancient microbial life, whereas the UAEs Hope orbiter will help scientists to understand how gas escapes its atmospherea process that has made Mars cold and dry. Technological advances mean that samples collected by Perseverance could eventually be brought back to Earth, allowing more detailed analysis.

But space exploration is also a matter of prestige and techno-nationalism. Chinas growing space race with its neighbours, India and Japan, which have also sent probes to Mars, reflects their jostling for influence on Earth. The UAE, the space agency of which was founded only in 2014, has crowed that its Hope orbiter is the first interplanetary mission by any Arab country. This posturing is a far cry from the white-hot space rivalry between America and the Soviet Union during the cold war, and there is plenty of collaboration, too: NASA is working with the European Space Agency to retrieve samples collected by Perseverance, for example. But the number of new spacefaring countries reflects a diffusion of wealth, technology and power.

As well as the UAE, lots of other countries have founded space agencies since 2010, including Australia, Mexico, New Zealand, Poland, Portugal, South Africa and Turkey. For now, states have a monopoly on Mars. But billionaires want in, too. Elon Musk, the boss of SpaceX, a private rocketry firm, claims he will launch people to Mars by 2026. Jeff Bezos recently announced that he will step down as the chief executive of Amazon partly to focus on his space venture, Blue Origin. Last month the company successfully tested a rocket designed to carry passengers, although Mr Bezos prefers the idea of floating space colonies to dusty rocks like Mars. One day a trip to Mars may be more about leisure than scientific endeavour. As Perseverance scours the planets surface for clues of ancient life, new life is preparing to set foot.

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Why are there so many missions to Mars? - The Economist

UAE’s Hope probe beams back its first picture of Mars – New Atlas

The United Arab Emirates first interplanetary mission has passed a major milestone, successfully placing a spacecraft in orbit around Mars and beaming back its first ever picture of the Red Planet. The Hope probes arrival marks an important step forward in the countrys efforts to explore space, which include sending a rover to the Moon and pursuing a vision of one day building a human colony on Mars.

The Hope probe was launched in July of 2020 and arrived at the Red Planet following a journey of almost 500 million km (310 million miles). This makes the UAE just the fifth nation to reach Mars, and after slipping into its orbit last Tuesday, the spacecraft fired up its multi-wavelength camera to grab some photographic evidence.

The 12-megapixel image was taken around 25,000 km (15,500 miles) above the surface of the planet, and represents the first instalment of more than 1 TB of data that the Hope probe will relay back to Earth. Along with the camera, the spacecraft is equipped with an infrared spectrometer and ultraviolet spectrometer, which it will use to study weather and the Martian atmosphere and eventually build the first complete picture of the different layers within it.

As part of this science phase of the mission, the probe will also gather the first ever planet-wide, 24x7 picture of Mars daily weather and atmospheric dynamics across the course of a full Martian year, or 687 Earth days. This is expected to take until April 2023, though the probe could potentially be used to gather data for another two years after that.

Also forming part of the UAEs ambitious space exploration program is the Rashid Lunar Rover mission, which aims to make the country just the fourth nation to land on the Moon. Slated for launch in 2024, the mission is intended to probe the makeup of the lunar soil and thermal properties of the surface.

Both missions will inform the UAEs Mars 2117 strategy, which involves a simulated Mars mission here on Earth and the overarching aim of establishing human colonies in Mars by 2117.

Source: Emirates News Agency

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UAE's Hope probe beams back its first picture of Mars - New Atlas

The race to live on Mars – Conversations – ABC News

Tamara Davis is a cosmologist who is is wildly excited by the NASA rover landing on Mars.

She says its only a matter of time until astronauts visit Mars and that before long there will also be a colony on the Red Planet.

Tamara also studies black holes, dark energy, dark matter and is helping manage the Dark Energy Survey, involving over 400 researchers on four continents.

And is leading a multi-million-dollar Laureate Fellowship to explore why the expansion of the universe is accelerating.

Over two episodes, Catalyst explores what it will take to get to and live on Mars and why scientists think life could once have existed there and may still do.

Mars: Our Second Home? Tuesday February 23 - 8:30pm

Mars: The Hunt for Life Tuesday March 2 - 8:30pm

Tamara is a presenter on ABC TV's Catalyst

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The race to live on Mars - Conversations - ABC News

The geopolitics of NASA’s Perseverance mission to Mars – Quartz

A robotic exploration mission sent by NASA will attempt to land on the Martian surface later today (tune in to watch starting at 2:15 US eastern time), catching up to two probes sent by China and the United Arab Emirates that arrived last week.

The US has been here before, and its rover is equipped, for the first time, with a small helicopter that will attempt to explore Mars in flight. Chinas first trip to Mars will also attempt the difficult task of landing sometime in May or June. The UAEs mission will orbit the planet, carefully mapping it with remote sensors.

The arrival of all three probes at the Red planet was driven by its relative proximity to earth last year when the missions launched, but also presents a symbolic lineup: The reigning space power and its main competitor, along with a third nation outlining a new model of national space investment.

Its really important that NASA and the US continue to lead in space exploration, continue to do these civilization-first type missions, says Steve Jurczyk, a veteran NASA executive currently serving as the agencys interim head until president Joe Biden nominates a permanent replacement.

But what does leading in space mean in a world where space technology is increasingly easy to access? The old model of the Apollo program, which signaled technological superiority to the rest of the world, is now outmoded.

The US has been slow to catch on, to be frank, because it misunderstands some of the fundamentals of the new race, says Peter Garretson, a retired US Air Force officer who is now a senior fellow focused on space strategy at the conservative-leaning American Foreign Policy Council. For newly arrived space powers, repeating old tricks and doing new first-of-a-kind tricks still commands attention. But what really matters is who is establishing a long-term industrial and logistical base from which they can command long-term economic power.

Garretson and Namrata Goswami, an independent space policy analyst, have written a book called Scramble for the Skiesthat outlines their expectation that space power will be built around exploiting the economic potential beyond earth. In particular, they fear China will outstrip other powers because of its long-term focus on development.

Today, the context of space is much more about the economic returns, Goswami told Quartz in an email. A service like GPS or BeiDou offers the possibility of billions of dollars in return on investments. Countries like China are investing in space technologies like 3D printing, advanced robotics, and AI given their rationale of trillions of dollars of resources waiting on the Moon and asteroids to be harvested. The idea is not just showcasing space technology for its own sake, but towards a long-term strategic purpose.

US goals in space are not even one-thousandth as ambitious as what the Chinese have articulated, Garretson says, citing Beijings detailed plans to outstrip the US as a space power by 2045with a new space station, a moon colony, and the development of technology to capture solar power in orbit.

In comparison, American experience with space success during the Apollo program has led to a culture that favors symbolic moonshot projects over long-term, cumulative investment. But under recent presidents the growing role of public-private partnerships and policy directives prioritizing the economic development of space has bent policy toward this vision.

The Artemis program, launched under Trump to return US astronauts to the moon, provides a case study. The initial goal of laying the groundwork for sustainable long-term presence there fits with this new vision of space power, but the push to strip away the more complex parts of the program in order to meet an arbitrary 2024 deadline made less sense. Garretson says that delaying the 2024 date to build more useful lunar infrastructure makes sense. Any part of the architecture that is expendable and is not able to be used by the private sector for their own purposes is a missed opportunity, he adds.

As the US warily eyes China (and Russia) as rivals in space, it will also find itself working more with partners, both traditional and newly arrived.

In some cases, the UAE has an advantagethey havent got a history, they dont have these processes and procedure, Jurczyk says, comparing the young space program with its private-sector start-ups. In some ways they can be more innovative and lean forward in exploiting cube sats and small spacecraft. Were supporting them with lessons learned engineering very complex systems and help them with enabling their innovation.

For NASAs rover Perseverance, a key part of its mission will be setting aside samples of Martian geology to return to earth. The return mission, launching in 2026, relies on a rover built by the European Space Agency to snatch the samples.

For the countries with new programs, space power isnt just about achieving scientific milestones. It is about economic development, as in India, which began its space program just weeks after the Apollo 11 landing to enable weather forecasting, climate monitoring, and other development goals, Namrata says. And the message of exploration isnt just for other countries but also for a domestic audience, allowing unelected governments in Abu Dhabi or Beijing to gain prestige in front of their people.

But small, wealthy countries like the UAE and Luxembourg, itself a satellite pioneer, see a chance to win more than just prestige. Garretson argues that these countries are well positioned to be mediators and craft a new global consensus on space activity, enabling access to other technologies and attracting financial activity, as well as bigger role in global affairs.

Any nation that seeks to carry the banner of leadership in the world symbolically must also carry it in space, he says.

A version of this story originally appeared in Quartzs Space Business newsletter.

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The geopolitics of NASA's Perseverance mission to Mars - Quartz

Mars is an example of something that’s useless. There are others – Real Change News

Whats the attraction of Mars? I dont get it. Its an entire planets worth of desert. The total surface area of Mars is slightly less than the land area of earth, minus the water area, and its all cold desert.

Who needs this planet? You cant breathe the air. Itll be decades before anyone will ever be able to build a golf course there with real grass. Theyll have to settle for astroturf, shipped in at a cost of billions of dollars. Not only will there be no hope of raising dairy cows or goats in the foreseeable future, you can forget almonds and soy beans, too. Mushrooms will only grow between your toes.

People will have to live underground to get away from cumulative radiation exposure at the surface. You go a couple 100 million miles through vacuum, and as soon as you get to your destination, you have to dig a trench, build a subterranean home in it and cover it and live in it almost all the time.

The streaming video will be terrible, and Amazon deliveries will take ages. The gravity is so weak people will need special exercise equipment to keep their muscles from wasting away. No more getting the exercise you need by walking to work and back.

And yet for all that, there are people eager to sign up to join in colonizing Mars as soon as Elon Musk is ready to fire them at it. In the meantime the exploration of the planet by robots is getting ridiculous. Just the last two weeks weve seen not one but two Mars orbiters arrive at Mars, days apart, one from the United Arab Emirates and the other from China. Then, this Thursday, a US robot explorer is expected to land on the surface of the planet.

The US robot is equipped with microphones so we will be able to hear what Martian wind sounds like. Because, were buying property there, and thats the kind of thing you want to know when youre buying property. Whats the noise like? Is it going to keep me up at night?

Conditions on Mars are so awful, it would be immoral to set up a penal colony there. A crime against humanity.

Comparing colonizing Mars to colonizing the Moon, the Moon has pretty much all the same drawbacks Mars has. Nothing but desert. You have to live underground. Nothing will grow there for ages. Extra exercise equipment necessary.

But you could get Netflix. The view from the earth-facing-side is way better than any view from Mars. And when you got tired of it, you could get back to earth a whole lot easier and in just a few days.

Speaking of escaping tiresome conditions, I just googled When will this Senate hearing be over? Navigator, plot me a course for out of here. Google didnt help much.

There could be witnesses! That could drag the whole process out for days.

Its a pity the final vote cant be anonymous. The Senate can agree to an initially secret ballot, but if just 20 senators demand the votes be read off publicly, they have to be. And you can count on those 20 senators coming forward.

As a result, the whole exercise is going to provide multiple chapters in an upcoming book to be titled Profiles in Cowardice: the Trump Acquittal. Subtitled: All the Presidents Cowards.

The bad news: The Senate will probably vote to acquit. The good news: The trial isnt just before the Senate. It is, more importantly, before the American people. The people have been watching. As one of Trumps own lawyers said, the trial is unnecessary because the people can decide whether to vote for Trump again. All the more reason for the trial. Let the people see what voting for Trump again entails.

It entails a repeat of the January 6 coup attempt. If he even runs again in 2024 and loses again, we could get another assault on the Capitol building and Congress. It might be better organized the next time.

During the 2024 campaign season, the Republicans could choose to remove all barriers to the renomination of Trump. They could choose to have no primaries and let him coast to nomination. But if they do and theres another fiasco like we had January 6th, it will be on their heads, and the Republican Party will become history.

Dr. Wes Browning is a one time math professor who has experienced homelessness several times. He supplied the art for the first cover of Real Change in November of 1994 and has been involved with the organization ever since. This is his weekly column,Adventures in Irony, a dry verbal romp of the absurd. He can be reached at drwes@realchangenews.org.

Read more in the Feb. 17-23, 2021 issue.

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Mars is an example of something that's useless. There are others - Real Change News

A Spanish startup is offering trips to space in helium balloons as a cheaper alternative to SpaceX – Business Insider

Founded in 2009 by Jose Mariano Lopez-Urdiales, Spanish startup Zero 2 Infinity wants to launch passengers 40 kilometers into space using helium balloons.

Setting off from Andalucia in the south of Spain, the trip will take six hours.

The ascent will take three hours, while two hours will be spent floating in space, and a further hour will be spent on the descent.

Lopez-Urdiales was first struck by the idea while helping his astrophysicist father to float helium balloons to the threshold of space, he told Sifted.

The aim of the 40km flight is to allow passengers to experience the "overview effect," allowing them to experience the blackness of space, the roundness of the earth, and its blue color all without actually entering space itself, which is at around double the distance from Earth at 80 kilometers.

For the landing, the capsule containing the passengers detaches from the helium balloon and lands with a very large parachute, Lopez-Urdiales told El Economista.

He also highlighted that the space flight didn't produce any noise or CO2 emissions, nor did it bring with it any risk of explosion.

The company previously carried out a test in 2012 sending a humanoid robot up to an altitude of 32 kilometers.

At the time they said they wanted to eventually offer hours of flight time so people could experience longer periods in space.

They conducted a further test in 2017 launching a prototype consisting of a balloon and a rocket to a height of 40 kilometers, Phys.Org reported.

Zero 2 Infinity the only Spanish startup in the space tourism market. EOS-X Space, founded by Kemel Kharbachi, is exploring a very similar concept and plans to launch its first commercial flight in 2023.

Lopez-Urdiales accused Kharbachi of copying the company's concept after he worked with them on a funding deal that fell through. However, Kharbachi has denied the accusations.

Other space tourism concepts entail entering space itself at a high altitude. One landmark moment was when Space Adventures launched businessman Dennis Tito up to the International Space Station for eight days.

The Richard Branson-headed Virgin Galactic also aims to launch flights into space. In 2019, it became the first space tourism company to be listed on the New York Stock Exchange.

Elon Musk's SpaceX wants to go even further, getting humans to Mars by 2026 and eventually building colonies on the red planet.

Zero 2 Infinity's concept comes at a much lower price than the other options, at just over $130,000. However, Lopez-Urdiales says the transport still has to be tested out by professionals, who are scheduled to do so later this year.

The company also still needs to secure another $2.4 million in funding, despite having already raised around $7.2 million.

"We already have the capsules, the permits, the insurance, and the flight center," Lopez-Urdiales said. "It's now just a question of securing the remaining funding."

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A Spanish startup is offering trips to space in helium balloons as a cheaper alternative to SpaceX - Business Insider

Will Mars become an object of international competition? – Brookings Institution

February has been a big month for Mars exploration. We already have seen the United Arab Emirates and China successfully place orbiters around Mars, while the United States hopes to build on its past successes with Mars rovers Spirit and Opportunity by landing a new one named Perseverance there this week. That rover is equipped with instruments that will search for life, seek to convert Martian carbon dioxide into oxygen, and fly around the surface.

All of these activities are exciting for scientists and space enthusiasts because of the possible gains in knowledge and technical innovation. As noted in a Mars blog post last year, there are many reasons to explore the Red Planet from the potential to gain a better understanding of the origins of life to the chance to develop new technologies and lay the groundwork for space tourism and mining.

Much of space exploration in recent decades has been marked by international cooperation. The United States, for example, has worked with Russia and 13 other countries on the International Space Station, the launch of space telescopes, and the development of land-based observatories. Scientists from many nations compare notes, share data, and collaborate on academic papers. There are international conferences where experts report preliminary findings and get feedback from their peers.

Yet the geopolitical situation is shifting dramatically in ways that could imperil future cooperation. There is anger over Russias alleged role in the SolarWinds hack of U.S. government agencies and leading business enterprises. In addition, there are Russia sanctions due to that countrys takeover of Crimea and invasion of Ukraine.

Relations with China also have grown tense as the two countries compete over trade, national security, and economic power. There is concern over that nations treatment of Hong Kong and its human rights record in regard to political and religious minorities. Many Democrats and Republicans have called for tougher action against China.

These tensions are spilling over into space exploration. Not wanting to be reliant upon Russian launch rockets, the United States has developed its own multi-stage rocket to send astronauts to the space station. And a number of years ago, Congress enacted legislation that precluded NASA from working with Chinese scientists.

As a result of its exclusion from the American space program, China has developed agreements with Asian, European, and Latin American nations to explore the Moon and space in general. It is expected to launch its own international space station this year with financial support from other countries.

Last year, the United States negotiated an agreement with eight nations called the Artemis Accords that enables individual nations or specific private companies to create exclusive zones on the moon. That will enable the founding signatories (Australia, Canada, Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, and United States, with later signatures by Brazil and the Ukraine) to build colonies, engage in space tourism, or undertake mining activities in those areas.

Yet other nations have criticized the agreement. Countries such as China, France, Germany, India, and Russia so far have not signed the accord. Among their objections include its focus on bilateral agreements that may be outside of existing international frameworks, the role of private exploration companies, and concerns about American primacy in space.

The risk of planned activities is that the Moon, Mars, comets, asteroids, and other solar system objects will become the focus of international competition and space commercialization. Are exclusive zones going to become mini-nations that engage in similar competitiveness, conflict, and mistrust that characterize their earth-based entities? Are there meaningful ways to create cross-national areas that encourage peace, cooperation, and prosperity?

Going forward, these are crucial questions. On planet Earth, countries are establishing defense forces that militarize near-earth orbits. With the importance of satellite communications, leaders are taking steps to defend orbiting satellites and make sure those of other nations were not used for offensive purposes. While understandable given their status as critical infrastructure, these moves set precedents that could prove quite risky.

As countries see outer space through the lens of colonization and commercialization, we need to think about how to govern the solar system beyond our planet. Will settlements on the Moon and Mars be democracies or run according to military principles? Which environmental rules should apply to lunar mining operations? What legal rules and norms should apply to Mars and the Moon? If we do not develop answers to these questions and have broad-based international agreements that enforce them, we could end up in a dystopian space future based on military interests and commercial exploitation.

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Will Mars become an object of international competition? - Brookings Institution

Crayolas sprawling new exhibit launches at Franklin Institute with creativity on the brain (PHOTOS) – lehighvalleylive.com

If humanity ever colonizes Mars, its bound to need some sort of recreational outlet similar to the sports played here on Earth. But in a zero-gravity environment, what kind of sports can be played? What kind of weight and angle measurements will come into play when designing Mars-appropriate sports?

If those questions have sent you into a head-scratching brainstorm session, then Clayton Ferguson can call Crayola IDEAworks a success. Problem-solving exercises like this one are just one of the components to the new 17,000-square-foot Crayola exhibition opening on Saturday at the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia. Crayola IDEAworks: The Creativity Exhibition is a sprawling interactive experience making its premiere this weekend, and its designed for participants to maximize their creativity and tap into their unique talents to solve problems and complete imaginative activities.

Ferguson, the executive producer and co-owner of the exhibition, and his company Agency 808 have been working with Crayola for about two and a half years on IDEAworks, focusing on the goal of tapping into the creativity people use every day.

You make thousands of creative decisions every single day, he said. Were really trying to teach kids and families to really tap into the process of it. Creative problem-solving skills are something that really are building blocks to every single pillar of individuals.

The exhibition is broken up into two sections: the IDEA (which stands for Identify, Define, Explore and Assess) Workshop and the Colorverse. The IDEA Workshop, Ferguson said, is basically creating a profile of the participant (which is geared towards kids, of course, but people of all ages can exercise their creativity muscle) and how they approach solving problems and decision-making. That approach is then used in the Colorverse through imaginative challenges such as the Mars colony.

Those involved in this partnership between the world-renowned Franklin Institute and globally beloved Crayola feel its a no-brainer. Ferguson, whos worked on different exhibitions with the institute before, credits the museum with always thinking ahead of the curve. The team at the institute jumped at the chance to be involved in the launch of IDEAworks when Ferguson brought the idea to some major museums.

Theyve been a part of the entire process with us from even the creative development a year and a half ago, he said.

While it helps that each institution is essentially in the others backyard, with more or less an hour and a half drive separating the institute and Crayolas Easton headquarters, Franklin Institute President and CEO Larry Dubinski cites their similar missions as another binding factor.

Were rooted in this spirit of invention and innovation and entrepreneurship, he said. I think thats essentially this great synergy between Crayola and the Franklin Institute.

Opening an exhibition like this during the COVID-19 pandemic has certainly provided its challenges. But both Ferguson and Dubinski expressed their confidence in the safety measures in place so that IDEAworks can be a completely safe adventure.

Regular cleaning and mask-wearing has been a constant since the institute opened back up in July. And with the sheer size of IDEAworks, operating at 25% capacity means there can be about 85 people in a 17,000-square-foot space. Plenty of room for problem-solving in peace.

IDEAworks opens on Saturday to the general public and is scheduled to close on July 18. Purchasing tickets in advance is highly recommended, and tickets are $12 per person.

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Connor Lagore may be reached at clagore@njadvancemedia.com.

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Crayolas sprawling new exhibit launches at Franklin Institute with creativity on the brain (PHOTOS) - lehighvalleylive.com

Hubmen trying the meet the challenges in the new conference – SW News Media

The Jordan boys basketball team is being challenged in its first season in the Wright County Conference.

The Hubmen endured a stretch where it lost five straight league games after a 4-1 start. But the losing skid was snapped Feb. 17 with a 50-43 home win over Delano, getting 10 points apiece from sophomore Mack Schmidt and senior Reagan Koch.

Jordan won the Minnesota River Conference title last year with a 13-1 mark. The WCC is a bigger step up for the program this season.

"This is a very good conference and there is never a night off," Jordan coach Matt Urbanek said. "I think every team in the conference is capable of beating every other team. That makes it fun, and it will also help to prepare us for the playoffs.

"Our goal is to continually improve throughout the season and play our best basketball in the postseason," Urbanek added. "Our conference schedule will certainly help us with that."

The Hubmen will end the regular season March 12 with a league game at Hutchinson. The Tigers won 84-82 over Jordan in the first meeting between the two teams Feb. 16.

Last winter, back on March 13, Jordan was all set to take on Waseca in the Section 2AA championship, but the Minnesota State High School League ended the winter sports season the morning of the title game due to the emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Waseca looks to be the team to beat again this season. The Bluejays are ranked No. 1 in the state.

The Section 2AA tournament will start March 16. The title game is set for March 26.

State quarterfinal play for boys basketball will be March 30-31, followed by the semifinals April 6-8 and the title games for all four classes April 9-10. The Target Center in Minneapolis has been tentatively set as the venue.

Jordan made the state field in 2018, finishing sixth.

Meanwhile, in the loss to Hutchinson, Koch led the Hubmen with 32 points. Junior Isaac Young finished with 18 points, while senior Jojo Kloeppel and junior Owen Montreuil were also in double figures with 15 and 10 points, respectively.

Jordan also lost 85-73 at home to Orono Feb. 12. Koch again led the way with a season-high 33 points. He leads the team at 20.1 points per game.

Young scored 16 points for the Jordan in the loss, while Kloeppel finished with 11 points and Montreuil added 10.

"We've been very competitive in every game," Urbanek said. "We feel like we are right there. In the last few games we have been hurt by a big run from our opponents in each of those games.

"We need to play with more consistency and be able to stop those runs when they start," Urbanek added. "Overall, our players are confident and they've brought a great attitude every day."

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Hubmen trying the meet the challenges in the new conference - SW News Media