The Guardian

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Belgium unites to enjoy national team’s World Cup success over USA and Trump

  • Fans across Belgium watched 4-1 win in early hours

  • Victory ‘a real slap in the face for Trump and Infantino’

Belgium fans reacted with jubilation after the national team trounced the USA in a World Cup game that was overshadowed by the controversy over Donald Trump’s lobbying to overturn the suspension of the striker Falorin Balogun.

Belgium’s prime minister, Bart De Wever, has yet to comment on the national team’s triumph, but the official Instagram account of his cat offered a sardonic, albeit indirect sign of satisfaction. Maximus, De Wever’s beloved cat, was shown lying on a rug holding a soft toy in the image of the US president. “I slept really well last night. And you?” reads the speech bubble in Dutch.

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‘It still haunts me’: the puppet show Dracula that’s definitely not for small children

The dreaded bloodsucker will be getting his fangs into the Edinburgh fringe this year – in a deeply creepy, liberty-taking show with a sisterly twist. We meet its director

Who is your Dracula? Max Schreck’s toothy Nosferatu, Bela Lugosi in a tux, the lantern-jawed host of Hotel Transylvania? This notorious shapeshifter “exists for us even before we know who he is” says theatre director Yngvild Aspeli, who is bringing a puppet bloodsucker to the Edinburgh fringe this summer. “There were stories of vampires long before Bram Stoker but he gave new life to them.”

After watching her deeply creepy show Dracula: Lucy’s Dream, that eerily waxen, lifesized puppet has for me become as indelible as top-hatted Gary Oldman or gorily grinning Christopher Lee. It matches Jonathan Harker’s assessment of the count in Stoker’s novel: “The general effect was one of extraordinary pallor.” I saw the show on tour in Paris several months ago and it still haunts me: I could swear this Drac disintegrated then reappeared before my eyes, such is the technical sophistication of Aspeli’s French-Norwegian company Plexus Polaire. Thanks in part to Emilie Nguyen’s spectral lighting, stunning transformations take place, with the actors and puppets frequently becoming indistinguishable.

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New York man sues ICE for sending officers to his house after he emailed agency head

David Streever had emailed acting ICE director after an immigration officer fatally shot Minneapolis resident Renee Good

An upstate New York resident sued US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) for sending federal officers to his house with a warning over an email he sent to the agency’s one-time head.

David Streever, who is a US citizen, was on a trip to Finland when two officers showed up to his Rochester home in June and presented his wife with a warning notice informing him that the email he sent months earlier was considered a threat, his attorneys said. Streever sent the email in January to Todd Lyons, then the acting director of ICE, after an immigration officer fatally shot Minneapolis resident Renee Good in a confrontation caught on video during an anti-ICE demonstration.

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The Invite welcomes heterosexual polyamory into cinemas. It’s about time

As a non-monogamist, it’s refreshing to see a film that reflects modern attitudes to non-conventional relationships, instead of using them as a punchline or cautionary tale

What is the chief obstacle that must be overcome in most modern-day big-screen romcoms? Lack of attraction? Misaligning schedules? Or, perhaps, heteromonogamy? If that wasn’t the dominating norm of human relationships, many movie plots would be much swifter to resolve. What if Elizabeth Olsen didn’t have to choose between Callum Turner and Miles Teller in Eternity? Or Twilight allowed Bella to be in a throuple with Edward and Jacob? Even though both films have fantasy narratives, their predestined outcome is as real as it gets – a man and a woman (re)marry and live happily ever after.

For a long time, alternative relationship structures were relegated to fan fiction, undeserving of mainstream fictional representations where conflict and resolution are both inscribed in coupledom. Even the films that challenged mononormativity, such as Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice, sustain the cautionary tale: opening up your relationship will eventually break it. As a practising non-monogamist, I yearn to see my values represented on screen as something more than a cautionary tale. Recently, the love triangles of Past Lives (implied) and Challengers (consummated) have suggested that perhaps Hollywood itself may be opening up. Then came The Invite, a poly-romcom just in time for the Week of Visibility for Non-monogamy.

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Fresh doubt over Marine Le Pen presidential bid as court orders electronic tag

Court shortens electoral ban but custodial sentence could complicate far-right leader’s campaign hopes

A French court of appeal has upheld Marine Le Pen’s ⁠conviction ⁠for embezzling European parliament funds but shortened her ban ⁠on running for elected office, potentially reopening a narrow path for the far-right ​leader ‌to run ‌in the 2027 presidential race.

However, ‌the court also handed Le Pen a three-year jail term, with two years suspended and one year in which she must wear ​an electronic ankle tag for monitoring. This could make a presidential campaign politically ⁠and logistically difficult.

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Jason Kottke's weblog, home of fine hypertext products

New Patricia Lockwood for the London Review of Books: A...

New Patricia Lockwood for the London Review of Books: A Tradcath Wedding. “He pronounced the word ‘nuptial’ as noopt-see-all. If that’s correct, never tell me.”

The Register

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

DRAM prices are killing the cheap smartphone

Rising memory prices are making budget smartphones commercially unviable to produce, forcing users to delay upgrades, pay more for higher-tier devices, or turn to the second-hand market instead. This is according to analyst Omdia, which estimates memory costs accounted for almost 60 percent of the total bill of materials in sub-$400 smartphones during calendar Q1 of 2026 – and things haven't improved since then. In fact, market watcher TrendForce predicted last month that the tech industry will see DRAM prices jump by another 50 percent or more in 2026, making it almost impossible for budget device makers to avoid passing on the component cost hike. To offset rising memory costs, manufacturers have tried switching to cheaper display panels, sensors, or radio frequency (RF) modules – but low-end phones are already built on such a tight cost structure that there's little room left to cut. As with entry-level PCs, this means vendors can no longer supply them at a price to satisfy cost-conscious buyers, and sales are already declining. Omdia expects sub-$400 smartphone shipments to drop 22 percent year-on-year in 2026. For other segments, where memory doesn't account for such a large proportion of the bill of materials, manufacturers have room to make trade-offs. Omdia believes that while the total global smartphone market will decline by 12 percent in 2026, the above-$400 segments will remain resilient and are actually expected to see shipments grow 5.7 percent. In response, smartphone makers are shifting production priority toward mid-to-high-end phones. For devices priced above $600, higher-performance system-on-chip (SoC) components, displays, and camera units account for a larger share of the total cost, giving vendors room to trim spending elsewhere and absorb some of the memory cost burden. Omdia says China-based manufacturers are reverting to LTPS (low-temperature polycrystalline silicon) display panels in some models that upgraded to the newer LTPO (low-temperature polycrystalline oxide) tech, reserving the latter for premium models. This can save $3 to $5 per device. Other trade-offs include reducing the number of cameras, using smaller image sensors, or switching to previous-generation SoCs, which can reduce costs by around 30 to 40 percent. In other words, buyers can expect to get a less capable device than they might previously have expected at a given price point this year, all thanks to the AI bubble causing a run on memory chips. Small wonder that memory manufacturers such as Samsung are raking in the cash, while consumers pay the price. It's also no surprise that buyers are choosing to hold onto smartphones for longer, with an average lifetime of 4.2 years – a figure expected to stretch out to 4.7 years before the end of the decade. The market for pre-owned phones is also growing, with a 12 percent increase in trade forecast for this year as many consumers seek to get a more premium device at a lower price. ®

The Lone Star Lady

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

The Lone Star Lady

Found Photograph

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Photograph

De Speld

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Superknecht haalt blusdekens voor de hele ploeg

In de Tour de France zijn het vaak de kopmannen die alle aandacht opeisen, maar voor de echte heldenverhalen moet je bij de renners zijn die zich wegcijferen voor die kopmannen. Zo bewijst ook deze superknecht, die in de derde etappe van de Ronde van Frankrijk blusdekens haalde voor de hele ploeg.

“Dit is heroïsch”, jubelde wielercommentator Karsten Kroon toen de knecht zich liet afzakken om bij de ploegleiderswagen de dekentjes op te halen. Met zijn handen vol dekentjes keerde de held vervolgens terug in het peloton om stuk voor stuk zijn teamgenoten te voorzien van het vuurwerende voorwerp.

Uiteindelijk liepen de collega’s van de heldhaftige knecht en de renner zelf slechts tweedegraads brandwonden op, waardoor de volledige ploeg vandaag gewoon kan opstappen in etappe 4.

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