Like I Poem I Never Meant to Write

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Like I Poem I Never Meant to Write

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Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

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Rellen en aanhoudingen Amsterdam en Den Haag, Franse burgeroorlog bleef uit

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Voorlopige lezing van de nacht: de rellen in Nederland waren aanzienlijk erger toen Marokko won van Nederland, dan toen Marokko gisteravond verloor van Frankrijk. We laten het aan de sociale wetenschap om dat te verklaren, maar het lijkt erop dat (Marokkaanse) buurtpreventie-teams zeer hun steentje bijgedragen hebben, zoals hier bij het afschermen van een NOS-cameraploeg en hier bij het leegruimen van een kruispunt. Ook stonden de ME, ME te paard, aanhoudingsteams en motoragenten met massale aanwezigheid ditmaal veel steviger in hun schoenen, wat leidde tot acht aanhoudingen in Amsterdam en vier aanhoudingen in de Haagse Schilderswijk.

De situatie in Frankrijk was vergelijkbaar. Er was zelfs voor Franse begrippen een massale politieaanwezigheid, want het land anticipeerde op ongekende onlusten, maar die bleven dus uit. Kranten Figaro, Le Monde en France24 schrijven in tegenstelling tot de massale rellen toen PSG de Champions League won, helemaal niet over rellen. Er waren her en der wel opstootjes (zie video's na breek), maar het is onduidelijk of er ĂĽberhaupt mensen aangehouden zijn, in tegenstelling tot die 426 arrestaties na PSG.

Waar het overigens het meest mis leek te gaan: LONDEN, waar minstens 1 agent gewond raakte en meerdere aanhoudingen zijn verricht.

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Glansrol voor buurtpreventie-teams?

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Etnische opstootjes Frankrijk

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Maar ook: erenhagen voor politie en brandweer

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Ondertussen in LONDEN

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The Register

Biting the hand that feeds IT — Enterprise Technology News and Analysis

Datacenter MacGyver saved the biggest football match of the year

ON CALL The 2026 FIFA World Cup continues and at the time of writing, The Register's home nation – England – remains in with a chance to bring home the trophy! We therefore devote this week's edition of On Call, our weekly reader-contributed tale of tech support, to the beautiful game. We're able to do so thanks to a reader we'll Regomize as "George" who once pulled off a great save when, decades ago, he worked as one half of the two-person tech team at one of Europe's most famous football clubs. "The IT manager wouldn't work weekends," George told On Call, and that meant he had to attend most home games to provide tech support. "Mostly I'd be paid overtime to sit around in the police control room for a few hours, eat free pies, and pretend I was vital to operations," George wrote. "Occasionally, a minor issue would require my input, but typically it was a quiet day spent watching the match in comfort." The club George worked for enjoys an ancient and enormously fierce rivalry with another. When the two teams meet, it's a major event, authorities insist on extra security, and police brace for trouble across an entire city. That caution extends into the club's stadium. "The club would hand over overall responsibility for stadium safety to a suitable deputy chief constable for the duration of the game," George explained. "That officer had the ultimate say on whether the match would go ahead in the case of any safety issues." On the day in question, power to the police control room suddenly went out – just as the ground started filling for the big match. "This was a major issue. We had no radio to coordinate hundreds of stewards and police officers, no CCTV monitoring stations, and most critically, no exit gate control – an essential requirement for acceptable match day safety," George told On Call. Club officials therefore dispatched an electrician to sort things out, but the sparky soon returned with bad news: a recent upgrade had burned out, and a fix would take days. On most match days, the outage would mean immediate cancellation of the match - and a big fine for the club for failing to stage the game. But with a fevered crowd flooding in from the streets near the stadium, calling off the match had the potential to see frothing fans turn ugly. The officer in charge and the stadium operations director therefore entered had a terse discussion, during which they asked the electrician if a portable generator might address the problem – but that wasn't possible. At this point, George asked the officer in charge what minimum setup would make it safe to let the game proceed. "The response was that if we could centrally open the exit gates at the end of the match, or in the event of an evacuation, and get the CCTV and radio working, the match could go ahead." George then revealed that he had just that week installed a new 4U uninterruptible power supply (UPS) in the football club's server room and had been charging it ever since. (In case any tech-averse football fans stumble upon this story, a UPS is a substantial battery used to keep critical computers running when power drops out. They store plenty of energy, but nobody assumes they'll last for hours.) George felt the UPS unit might do the job. "After some quick napkin math, I suggested it might have enough juice to power those critical systems for long enough to allow the match to proceed," he wrote. The police officer and operations director agreed to let George try to make it work. "I rounded up a few lingering stewards, the electrician, and two uniformed coppers, and we set off to the server room. We retrieved the UPS and humped the massive bloody thing halfway round the stadium, through the crowds, and up the tight stairwell into the control room." George then jury-rigged extension cables to the systems that needed power and turned them on. "I felt like Tom Hanks trying to get that guidance computer online in Apollo 13," he told On Call. "Amazingly, everything actually came up and stayed up, the UPS's extremely vague five LED capacity lights held solid at full green and the order was given for the match to proceed," George said. He spent the entirety of the match staring at those LEDs, and as the match progressed, he started praying it would not go too deep into stoppage time. "The final whistle blew, we opened the gates, and the UPS lasted another 10 minutes before finally conking out," he told The Register. "For my MacGyveresque efforts, saving the high-stakes match, protecting the safety of tens of thousands of fans, and saving the club a fortune in fines, I was duly awarded a gift voucher to be spent at the club's on-site superstore," George told On Call. "The value of the voucher was not even enough to buy myself a single home-team shirt." Adding insult to injury, when he checked his next payslip, George realized the club had counted the value of the voucher as additional income, and he had therefore paid tax on it. Have you saved a big event or MacGyvered a tech support fix? If so, click here to send your story to On Call. We'd love the chance to steer it into the back of the net on a future Friday. ®

Hugo de Jonge werd het boegbeeld van het coronabeleid en daarmee ook de nationale kop van Jut

Gevoel voor timing kan de parlementaire enquêtecommissie Corona niet worden ontzegd. Na zes volle weken komt vrijdag in het laatste verhoor voor de zomerstop de belangrijkste…

In Tanger werd de open rekening uit Qatar de hele dag gevoeld, maar Frankrijk hield de deur naar de halve finale dicht

Het had een historische revange moeten zijn. Maar opnieuw versperde Frankrijk met een 2-0 overwinning Marokko de weg naar ultieme WK-glorie. In Tanger bouwde de spanning de hele dag op. „Niemand betwist dat Marokko werkelijk een grote naam is geworden op het wereldtoneel.”

AI en het gif van de twijfel: hoe wij zelf veranderen door de technologie

Dat AI van alles ingrijpend kan gaan veranderen, wordt steeds duidelijker. Maar hoe verandert AI onszelf, als mens? Wat doet het met onze nieuwsgierigheid? En met ons vertrouwen in wat we de hele dag zien, horen en lezen?


Slashdot

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Humanoid Robots Controlled By Surgeons Did World-First Operation On Live Pigs

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Humanoid robots have surgically removed the gallbladders from living animals in an unprecedented medical experiment -- but not as autonomous machines capable of replacing human doctors. Instead, skilled human surgeons remotely controlled the robots' movements in a new example of human-robot teamups. The teleoperated humanoid robots completed two minimally invasive surgeries by removing gallbladders from live pigs during a preclinical trial that was published in the journal Nature. If this approach eventually proves clinically ready for human patients, surgeons could use such humanoid robots to remotely perform robotic-assisted surgical care in smaller hospitals and clinics that lack the resources to install specialized but expensive surgical robots.

The experiment used a Unitree G1 humanoid robot made by leading Chinese robotics company Unitree. The cheapest baseline G1 model with effectively non-functional hands has a starting price of $13,500 and shipping costs ranging between $300 and $1,200, whereas adding crucial upgrades such as dexterous robotic hands can easily push the cost beyond $67,000. But such humanoid robots made in China are still significantly cheaper than specialized surgical robots like Intuitive Surgical's da Vinci Surgical System, which can cost anywhere between half a million dollars and several million dollars. The specialized surgical robots can also weigh about 1,800 pounds and take up considerably more space in operating rooms. By comparison, the Unitree humanoid robots, standing at 5 feet tall and weighing just 60 pounds, may be more suitable for smaller clinical settings in remote areas.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Cloudflare to scroogle Google

Adweek reports, that Cloudflare is set to deny access by multi-purpose crawlers to many sites in their content delivery network by default, particularly those that serve to gain data for training generative AI, which stands to block Google's access to up to one-fifth of the World Wide Web.

The default will be set for new accounts and sites on Cloudflare's free tier. The move will affect Apple and Bing, but especially Google, which has used a single crawler to index sites both for their search and their AI training. In the past this would have meant economic suicide for commercial sites, but over time they've been getting so much less traffic from Google that the tradeoff doesn't seem as bad.

Forced to surf ...

"Adventure before dementia" has added a photo to the pool:

Forced to surf ...

Waves are my theme for today, in this shot, a lone surfer braves the waves on a local beach. It's the sad story of my own life, I was born to surf but forced to work.