Blog Page 8

Spectrum Internet Experiences Long Outages (again)

With everyone hunkered down inside their homes, isolating from the pandemic, internet is very important. Most are working or studying from home and an internet outage is a major issue. Spectrum Internet had an outage last night starting at 7pm. Service was out for only a few minutes, but this is not the first time they have had a nationwide outage. Back in May they had an outage that lasted several hours causing panic for those who use it for school and work. Spectrum serves over 29 million customers in 41 states.

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This is not the first outage from Spectrum during quarantine

Georgia allots CARES Act money to improve student connectivity

Mississippi school to help out students with at home connectivity

Phillipines reopens internet cafes

Grading the Digital Showcases by Microsoft, Sony, EA, and Ubisoft

The COVID-19 pandemic has left a huge impact on the world in general. Essentially all social life has come to a standstill and many industries have had to adapt to a different world in 2020. Video games are no different and with the many shutdowns around the world, E3 was cancelled. Where usually we would have whole press conferences to detail upcoming game releases, instead we have had digital showcases in its place. Let’s take a look at what we have seen so far and grade them.

Inside Xbox Partners Showcase

The first event we saw came from Microsoft in May and was supposed to focus on their development partners and show first gameplay footage of Assassin’s Creed Valhalla. Microsoft really marketed this up as the first major event of the year, even though there would be no first-party content (more on that in a bit). Naturally, many people were excited to see what big AAA companies would be offering. Unfortunately, the event was filled with essentially only AA grade games, which is not bad, and many of the games shown looked good, but expectations were set way too high by Microsoft beforehand. Even Ubisoft let us down by not showing the promised Assassin’s Creed gameplay footage, adding further insult to injury.

Easily this was the worst event of the year because of the expectations that were set and nowhere matched by anything shown.

Grade: C-

PlayStation 5 “The Future of Gaming” Presentation

Sony had remained mostly silent throughout 2020, but that changed when June hit. We finally got our first look at what Sony has in store and they showed that their first-party lineup of games look to continue their strength into the next generation.  We got our first look at new entries in the Ratchet and Clank, Horizon, Spider-Man, Astro Boy, and LittleBigPlanet series as well as tons of great looking games like Kena: Bridge of Spirits, Little Devil Inside, and more. This was also the event that gave us our first look at the PlayStation 5’s unique design.

This was an incredibly strong showing for Sony, proving that they have no intention on slowing down their strong performance lately.

Grade: A

EA Play Live 2020

EA gets a lot of hate from gamers for their questionable business practices, but their 2020 show was arguably the best showing they have had in years. We got our first look at Star Wars: Squadrons, which looks like a very solid space battle game, a new Josef Fares game, a new SKATE game was confirmed to be in development, and there were some quality announcements from Apex Legends and The Sims 4. They also gave slight teases for future projects and their highly touted sports games, but there was notably a lot missing at the same time.

As stated above, this was EA’s best show in a long time. They had a lot of quality announcements, although some areas dragged (especially Rocket Arena) did not look like anything special.

Grade: B-

Ubisoft Forward

Following the disappointing showing of Assassin’s Creed Valhalla during the May Xbox event, Ubisoft were looking to change the narrative during their focused event in July. Assassin’s Creed looked about as good as we were expecting, and we got a new look at gameplay of Watch Dogs: Legion, although too much time was spent showing us information we already knew. There was also more time than necessary spent on mobile titles. Plus, many games we already knew about were noticeably absent.

Ubisoft promised another showing later in 2020, but their first digital showcase was very hit and miss. This also came during a time many top positions were vacated at the company during a string of abuse allegations, not helping the general outlook of the company.

Grade: C

Xbox Game Studios Showcase

Xbox Series X

For as disappointing a show Microsoft had in May, they were looking to turn that around in July with some looks at first party titles set to release in the future. We got our first look at Halo Infinite gameplay, and new Xbox Game Studio games were revealed including State of Decay 3, Avowed, Fable, and Forza Motorsport. All of these and the other games shown looked great and everything else that was shown is coming to Xbox Game Pass, further pushing how amazing a deal that service is.

Microsoft really turned things around with their latest digital event. We are really starting to see the new studios under their umbrella show new stuff, although it is disappointing to still have no official unveiling of what The Initiative is working on. For a team that is largely criticized for “not having enough games,” Xbox has a very bright future and that starts with the very consumer friendly Game Pass service.

Grade: A

Rare Shark Attack in Maine Kills Woman

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A woman and her daughter were swimming off of Bailey Island, part of Harpswell, Maine, when a call was placed for an apparent shark attack. The coast guard was in the process of sending a boat out when the swimmers were helped to land by passing kayakers. They were met there by Harpswell Emergency Medical Services, but the woman was pronounced dead at the scene. There is no information available about the daughter. Swimmers and boaters are urged to use caution in that area until more information is known.

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The Shark attack victim has been identified

The Coast Guard confirmed the call for possible shark attack

Three shark sightings off of Long Island

“Shark Tooth Cycling” introduced to raise money for Charcot Marie Tooth Disease

 

“Ellen” is Under Investigation for Poor Working Conditions

Warner Brother’s sent out a memo to staffers of “Ellen,” the talk show hosted by Ellen Degeneres, disclosing an ongoing investigation. There have been rumors of a hostile work environment on the set for months, prompting Warner Bros to begin interviews with current and former employees. Ellen Degeneres herself has not been named in the allegations, although one employee did say “I think the executive producers surround her and tell her, ‘Things are going great, everybody’s happy,’ and she just believes that, but it’s her responsibility to go beyond that.”

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Ellen set “dominated by fear”

The producers are instilling “racism, fear and intimidation”

This investigation comes after an expose published earlier this month

A news anchor in Georgia is first in COVID-19 vaccine trial

Potential Tropical Cyclone May Hit Florida

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As Southern Florida fights with rising numbers and hospitalizations from the coronavirus, another threat looms. Hurricane season. The first potential storm to hit has been seen, and is predicted to strengthen overnight. Right now it is classified as a “Potential Tropical Cyclone.” “There is a ton of long term uncertainty regarding not only the eventual track – but also how much it will intensify, or even hold itself together,” said Storm Team 8 meteorologist, Ian Oliver, “this is a storm that hasn’t even formed yet.”

Despite this, tropical storm warnings have been issued in Puerto Rico, US Virgin Islands, and some parts of the Dominican Republic.

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Storm expected to form by Wednesday night

The storm is expected to hit the Bahamas “at best”

Florida is preparing to extend eviction bans

Over 7000 inmates in the Florida correctional system have COVID-19

Couple Wears Swastika Masks to Grocery Store

Dustin Hart and his wife took mask personalization too far at a Food 4 Less in Santee, California. The couple walked into the store with Swastikas on their face masks. Several shoppers confronted the pair who responded, “It’s a peaceful protest” against the “Nazi” governor. Hart had apparently prepared for a confrontation as he filmed the whole incident on a body camera that he was wearing. The police were called and they were asked to remove the swastikas. The police informed them that by law they were free to wear them outside of the privately owned business but that the symbol was against the store’s policy. The couple eventually left without physical removal, but never removed the swastika masks.

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Something similar occurred in a Walmart in Minnesota

A German citizen confronted the couple wearing swastika masks

Will visitors actually go to Disneyland?

Multiple police/protester clashes over the weekend

Mookie Betts Joins the List of Players Whose Original Team Just Let Go. Why?

When the numbers for Mookie Betts’ contract extension with the Los Angeles Dodgers were revealed, they were big, but not big enough that the Boston Red Sox could say they were justified in dealing him. Immediately, Red Sox fans were even angrier than they were when the trade was made as they thought with great hope that there was a good chance of the club re-signing him as a free agent. Had that been a consideration at the time, they would not have attached David Price’s contract to Betts, nor would they have traded him to a team that had the financial wherewithal to retain him.

They did both, which essentially sealed their fate as moving on from Betts permanently, whether they admitted it to the fans and media or not.

Regarding the contract, its parameters are less than what was expected for a player of Betts’ abilities at his age. Clearly, COVID-19 was a factor. Given the current circumstances with a fractured season, the pending free agent market hindered by the health crisis and unavoidable labor strife on the horizon, Betts took the money rather than risk illness or injury.

The ongoing pandemic has impacted just about every aspect of sports on and off the field and it wasn’t until the first of the top-tier free agent dominoes began to fall that its ramifications on contracts came clear. Betts and the Dodgers agreed to a 12-year, $365 million contract extension to preclude his pending free agency and save the Dodgers from trading for what amounted to a scam timeshare that was severely damaged by a hurricane and ended up living with Snooki and The Situation.

Could he have gotten more?

Maybe.

Would he have?

One year ago, yes. Now? Just like everything else with this bizarre season with daily turmoil and an unpredictable outcome, it’s impossible to say.

Had the Red Sox known that the price tag would drop by around $100 million compared to the initial numbers being batted around to sign him, perhaps they would have pulled the trigger on that trade anyway. It was widely-panned and accurately viewed as a salary dump to get David Price’s contract off the books, but getting rid of Price did have value.

Mike Trout’s contract is the star whose gravity dictates the rotation of other players’ contracts. Betts isn’t Trout – nobody is Trout other than Trout – but is Betts worth $70 million less when he’s a year younger and has the lithe body type that tends to age better than the bigger, bulkier Trout? As people, they are exactly the type of players who clubs are wise to invest that kind of money in. The Red Sox went in a different direction.

Saying the Red Sox should have retained Betts and figured another strategy to get Price’s contract off the team is a reasonable position…in hindsight. At the time, however, the club was calculating the offers for Betts vs. the value of trading Betts, getting some decent prospect return and the massive benefit of dumping half of the $96 million remaining on Price’s deal.

The status of the team is also a contributing consideration. The Red Sox are starting a pseudo-rebuild. One of the drawbacks, if you can call it that, of being a big market team with cash available and some remaining talent in the organization is that the option to burn it to the ground, lose 100+ games for two or three years and tank for the future is off the table. With their history and ticket prices, they cannot do that. Still, their tacit lack of on-paper improvement, that they hired a caretaker manager Ron Roenicke to replace the fired Alex Cora, and that they replaced Dave Dombrowski with Chaim Bloom from the financially-strapped Tampa Bay Rays made their intentions clear. Even before COVID wreaked its havoc and turned MLB into a mishmash exemplar of inexplicable contemporary art sans dealers and collectors expressing its poignancy, they had conceded the 2020 season and probably the 2021 season as well. Their starting rotation is arguably the worst in baseball. They’re in a division with the powerhouse Yankees and the very good Rays. The team has no shot to win this year with or without Betts. They punted.

It is theoretically possible that they planned to try and re-sign Betts, but the club was circumspect about it while Red Sox fans and observers seemed to take it as a given when the likelihood of all the pieces falling in place for that to happen was quite small given Betts’ age, talent level and production. Once the numbers reduced to a level where the Dodgers would have been foolish not to pull the trigger on an extension, the delusion of Betts returning to Boston ended.

The question here is why are so many teams reluctant to retain their own stars when they have the money to do so and there is not a strategic blueprint in which they are trading the player or letting him walk as part of a comprehensive plan.

Hype aside, Bryce Harper is a level below Trout and Betts, but the Washington Nationals allowed him to leave with a perfunctory offer not made to retain him, but to say they tried when they really didn’t. They were proven right in that Harper’s Philadelphia Phillies similarly underachieved as Harper’s Nationals had with him in the fold and then won the World Series without him. At the time, simply allowing a 26-year-old former Most Valuable Player to walk away for nothing when the team had the money to sign him was bewildering. They did the same thing with Anthony Rendon. The Dodgers traded for Manny Machado and did even put up the pretense of trying to retain him. These players are young stars in their primes, but clubs exhibit no qualms in saying goodbye.

Personalities and on-field play aside, this is a philosophical change in which large market teams mimic small market teams in their spending decisions without the financial excuse to do so. Had this been a case of Barry Bonds and the Pittsburgh Pirates when the team did not have the money to retain him after 1992, then fine. It wasn’t. The players were in Boston and Washington. The Red Sox certainly could have paid Betts, but financial wiggle room aside, teams are increasingly wary of putting such a massive percentage of their payroll into one player, no matter how great he is; how young he is; what a tremendous person he is. Obviously, that does not hold true for all teams since Trout, Harper and Betts got their contracts for $330 million to $426 million, but it happens to a notable degree and it’s every year.

Statistics and objective valuations have changed sports forever. It was the Red Sox determination that they were better-served to take the offer on the table for Betts and get rid of Price that dictated this road. If there were factions who believed there was an off-ramp to get Betts back, the Dodgers and COVID blocked it.

There’s no doubt the Red Sox could have matched the contract Betts signed. But pre-COVID, does he accept that offer from them? It’s difficult to envision. Panning the trade, questioning the Red Sox motives, wondering why they were willing to deal a superstar in his prime for a mediocre return and salary relief – all are viable. To say they should have signed Betts to that deal ignores the fact that Betts would not have signed it last winter had there not been a pandemic to alter the landscape of, well, everything.

Grimes to Musk: “Turn Off Your Phone”

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Yesterday morning Elon Musk posted a cryptic two words on twitter, “Pronouns suck.” His partner, and mother to their child, Canadian musician Grime responded to the tweet. “I love you but please turn off ur phone or give me a dall [sic]. I cannot support hate. Please stop this. I know this isn’t your heart.”  Musk’s tweet, since deleted has sparked outrage online, with some reminding him that at least you know how to pronounce pronouns. This last was a dig at his son’s name, X AE A-XII, the pronunciation of which has been debated since the announcement.

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Elon Musk says he is trying to convince Kanye to postpone presidential bid

Musk explains he uses twitter DMs to swap memes

Is Elon Musk becoming too friendly with China?

When will we have self driving cars?