All posts tagged: fighting

Realism got Starmer here. But so far he’s fighting this election with fantasy economics | Gaby Hinsliff

Realism got Starmer here. But so far he’s fighting this election with fantasy economics | Gaby Hinsliff

It wasn’t quite John Major’s vision of old maids cycling through the mist to church. But the sepia-tinted memories Keir Starmer recounted in his first big campaign speech of growing up in Oxted, the Surrey town he called “about as English as you can get”, weren’t a million miles away. He talked about growing up in a house where the phone was sometimes cut off because his parents couldn’t afford to pay the bill; about how he identifies now with young couples realising they can’t afford a longed-for second child because of rocketing mortgages. But he also talked nostalgically about the ramshackle football pitch he played on, and shared with grazing cows, and what he called the British air of “quiet uncomplaining resilience” in an era when there was sadly a lot to be resilient about. Shades of those “do you remember … ?” pages on Facebook, where the middle aged reminisce about pork scratchings and playing on a ZX Spectrum. And if you’re rolling your eyes at all this stuff – well, it’s not …

Skillz CEO says company isn’t done fighting bots in mobile gaming

Skillz CEO says company isn’t done fighting bots in mobile gaming

Join gaming leaders live this May 20-21 in Los Angeles to examine the strategies needed to adapt and excel in an ever evolving landscape, featuring insights from leading voices and thought leaders in the industry. Register here. Skillz CEO Andrew Paradise spoke in the company’s earnings call about the company’s recent lawsuit against AviaGames, and the alleged “willful pattern of deceit” on the part of its executives to use bots to defraud players. According to Paradise, Skillz received $50 million from AviaGames as part of a settlement agreement that totals around $80 million. But the company is far from done, adding that AviaGames is not the only company out there using bots to defraud customers. At the conclusion of Skillz’s patent infringement lawsuit against AviaGames, the jury awarded the former almost $43 million. However, Paradise says Skillz and Big Run Studios entered into the settlement agreement with AviaGames afterwards. Starting next year, Skillz receives $7.5 million in licensing royalty payments for four years annually. However, Paradise said that $80 million is a “drop in the …

Turner: Art, Industry and Nostalgia review – Fighting Temeraire sets Tyneside ablaze | JMW Turner

Turner: Art, Industry and Nostalgia review – Fighting Temeraire sets Tyneside ablaze | JMW Turner

JMW Turner’s The Fighting Temeraire might be the most famous painting in London’s National Gallery and in 2005 was voted The Greatest Painting in Britain, but it’s hardly cool. Its heady atmosphere of patriotic pride and supercharged sentiment is the quintessence of the traditional image the gallery is trying to slough off in its bicentenary year. So while Caravaggio and Van Gogh are at the heart of celebrations in London, The Fighting Temeraire has been, as it were, dragged off by steam tug to be quietly moored on the Tyne. Yet instead of just borrowing this unfashionable masterpiece, as part of a project entitled National Treasures that has sent 12 NG paintings out and about, Newcastle’s Laing Gallery has built an ambitious and moving exhibition around it. Rays explode above it in a twilight display of crimson, gold and scarlet This lovely show demonstrates precisely why Turner’s 1839 depiction of a ghostly giant of the age of sail being pulled to its final breakup by a newfangled steam tug is just so tearjerkingly evocative of …

‘Our children’s schools were bombed’: the Eurovision stars fighting to rebuild Ukraine | Eurovision 2024

‘Our children’s schools were bombed’: the Eurovision stars fighting to rebuild Ukraine | Eurovision 2024

‘When you know how a country sounds,” says Jerry Heil, talking of representing Ukraine at Eurovision, “you can feel more empathy for them”. Alongside rapper alyona alyona, she is speaking from Malmö. It is the morning after the first semi-final, where they safely secured a slot in Saturday’s grand final, but they have not had time to celebrate. “We are like old people,” says alyona alyona. “No party, no drink, no nothing.” No partying and no nerves before performing either. “When we first rehearsed with the audience here in Sweden, I immediately got the feeling that they’re so supportive and so warm – in all senses!” says Heil. “I’m freezing all the time, but on stage at Eurovision, it’s like a sauna. The audience really give you the power and the energy, and you give it back, so it’s like the energy is circulating.” Their song, Teresa & Maria, refers to Mother Teresa and the Virgin Mary, and is dedicated to women’s courage and resilience, particularly in times of war. alyona alyona (real name Alyona …

Singapore ‘fighting a war’ against drug scourge given scale of lives lost, Victims Remembrance Day to be held: Shanmugam

Singapore ‘fighting a war’ against drug scourge given scale of lives lost, Victims Remembrance Day to be held: Shanmugam

SINGAPORE: Singapore is “fighting a war” against traffickers who profit off the drug trade at the expense of thousands of innocent lives, Law and Home Affairs Minister K Shanmugam said in Parliament on Wednesday (May 8). He framed Singapore’s fight against drugs as a war due to the “scale in terms of victims and lost lives” in this battle. Delivering a ministerial statement on Singapore’s national drug control policy, Mr Shanmugam cited statistics from various sources such as the World Health Organization, which reported 600,000 deaths in 2019 due to drug use, and the World Drug Report’s estimates in the same year where 31 million years of “healthy” life were lost due to disability and premature deaths as a result of drug use. “These are not mere statistics, but lives — fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters, sons and daughters,” he said. Mr Shanmugam added that he was delivering the ministerial statement because even though Singapore’s strict narcotics policies are effective and supported by Singaporeans, they are criticised “without merit” by some parties who are helping inmates to abuse the legal process …

Family Values or Fighting Valor? Russia Grapples With Women’s Wartime Role.

Family Values or Fighting Valor? Russia Grapples With Women’s Wartime Role.

The Russian Army is gradually expanding the role of women as it seeks to balance President Vladimir V. Putin’s promotion of traditional family roles with the need for new recruits for the war in Ukraine. The military’s stepped-up appeal to women includes efforts to recruit female inmates in prisons, replicating on a much smaller scale a strategy that has swelled its ranks with male convicts. Recruiters in military uniforms toured Russian jails for women in the fall of 2023, offering inmates a pardon and $2,000 a month — 10 times the national minimum wage — in return for serving in frontline roles for a year, according to six current and former inmates of three prisons in different regions of Russia. Dozens of inmates just from those prisons have signed military contracts or applied to enlist, the women said, a sampling that — along with local media reports about recruitment in other regions — suggests a broader effort to enlist female convicts. It’s not just convicts. Women now feature in Russian military recruitment advertisements across the …

Ukraine wipes out 42 Russian tanks as intense fighting erupts across frontlines | World | News

Ukraine wipes out 42 Russian tanks as intense fighting erupts across frontlines | World | News

On the Ukrainian side, forces have lost 797 tanks – 539 have been destroyed, 68 have been damaged, 59 have been abandoned, and 131 have been captured. Just yesteryday, the Ukrainian military released an update claiming Russia had lost 22 tanks in the last 24 hours alone, which would bring the total to 7,354. According to Bastian Giegerich, director-general of the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), Russia has lost more tanks in the war with Ukraine that it had operational at the start of the conflict. Source link

Heavy fighting continues in the east as Ukrainian soldiers struggle to hold back Russia in Donbas

Heavy fighting continues in the east as Ukrainian soldiers struggle to hold back Russia in Donbas

War in Ukraine is reshaping our world. Every weekday The Telegraph’s top journalists analyse the invasion from all angles – military, humanitarian, political, economic, historical – and tell you what you need to know to stay updated. With over 70 million listens, our Ukraine: The Latest podcast is your go-to source for all the latest analysis, live reaction and correspondents reporting on the ground. We have been broadcasting ever since the full-scale invasion began. Ukraine: The Latest’s regular contributors are: David Knowles David is Head of Audio Development at The Telegraph, where he has worked for over three years. He has reported from across Ukraine during the full-scale invasion.  Dominic Nicholls Dom is Associate Editor (Defence) at The Telegraph, having joined in 2018. He previously served for 23 years in the British Army, in tank and helicopter units. He had operational deployments in Iraq, Afghanistan and Northern Ireland.  Source link

Noose is tightening around Ukrainian exiles of fighting age

Noose is tightening around Ukrainian exiles of fighting age

A “fair” decision. That’s how Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba justified the order, issued on Tuesday, April 23, to temporarily suspend all consular services for Ukrainians old enough to serve in the army. The country, which is desperately short of soldiers for combat, will no longer issue passports to men aged 18 to 60 exiled abroad, with a few exceptions. Only “identity cards for re-entry into Ukraine” will continue to be issued. “This decision is purely political,” ranted Vlodymyr Dovhan, a computer scientist we met outside the Ukrainian consulate in Warsaw. Having arrived in Poland with his wife and daughter on February 23, 2022, on the eve of the Russian invasion, the Ukrainian believes that “this is not going to bring back Ukrainians living in Poland. My daughter already speaks Polish and feels at home here. As for me, I’ve set up my own business here.” The announced restrictions, the details of which are still unclear, are designed to prevent Ukrainians from “evading the obligation to deal with the issue of military registration,” according to …