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Amaterasu イタチ

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  1. Hours-long lines for security that often snake outside under tents. Untold numbers of angry passengers who have queued in those lines -- yet still missed their flights. Worker strikes and delayed or lost baggage. Condemnation by major airlines, most notably KLM. At Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport, labor shortages continue to fuel unprecedented chaos that began in the spring, prompting many travelers and aviation insiders to wonder what has happened to an airport long considered one of the most efficient and highly regarded in Europe -- if not the world. The beleaguered airport -- the world's third busiest for international passenger numbers in 2021 -- has continued to cut flight capacity, infuriating airlines such as KLM, the national carrier of the Netherlands whose hub is at Schiphol. The latest round of cuts asked airlines to implement reductions up to 22% for the winter season -- a "hopeless situation, lacking any perspective," KLM said in a release. KLM added that the situation is "damaging our reputation among passengers who are keen and willing to travel after the extended Covid crisis." The airline estimates it has incurred more than 100 million euros (about $96 million) in damages as a result. Over the summer, several airlines, including Air Malta, TUI and Transavia, opted to shift flights from Schiphol to other airports, according to Simple Flying. Many have placed blame on mismanagement, and on September 15, Dick Benschop, president and CEO of Royal Schiphol Group, announced his resignation. Benschop will remain in place until a successor is found. Benschop was a keynote speaker at the World Aviation Festival in Amsterdam, a conference attended by about 5,000 aviation industry professionals, where Schiphol's struggles were a common topic of conversation. In different presentations across two days, Benschop openly acknowledged Schiphol's "severe operational issues driven by staff shortages." He said management is committed to fixing the problems by providing a "reliable and predictable" passenger experience, improving job conditions and worker pay and working with airlines to build back capacity. But he also hinted that the challenges aren't over -- a disheartening prospect for passengers with upcoming flights during the fall school break across the Netherlands. Related content The world's best airline for 2022 named "Those conditions, those labor market constraints, will not disappear overnight," he said. "That's what we are dealing with and how we are dealing with it. And of course for everybody involved, it's extremely hard work. If you let customers down, and there are moments that that really happened, it's extremely frustrating. It's painful. But we will get through it." During the course of the conference, Schiphol was hit with yet another hurdle when the Dutch parliament announced that it seeks to further limit the airport's yearly maximum number of flight moments from 500,000 to 440,000 to reduce emissions and noise pollution. Benschop called the potential reduction a "very risky approach." It would hit KLM, Schiphol's largest user, especially hard, as the airline would have to drop about 30 routes to meet the new limits, according to Dutch media outlets including Financieele Dagblad and NL Times. In a statement, KLM said it wants to discuss alternate solutions, such as fleet renewal, with the government. LINK
  2. Nick Movie: Earthstorm Time: / Netflix / Amazon / HBO?: Netflix Duration of the movie: / Trailer:
  3. Live Performance Title: Future - BACK TO THE BASICS Signer Name: Future Live Performance Location: / Official YouTube Link: Your Opinion About the Track (Music Video): 7/10
  4. There's no denying that Nvidia's GeForce RTX 4090 will be one of the best graphics cards once it launches on October 12. However, the Ada-powered graphics card will consume considerable power to offer groundbreaking performance. The GeForce RTX 4090 carries a TDP rating of 450W. It's not the first time an Nvidia graphics card has had a colossal power envelope. The GeForce RTX 3090 Ti, the last generation's flagship, also flaunted the 450W badge. Regarding power supply capacity, Nvidia's recommendation remains the same: 850W, at least for the Founders Edition. Some over-engineered custom models, which sport heavy factory overclocks, require a 1,200W power supply. At any rate, consumers don't have to spend a small fortune for a new power supply as long as their units comply with the recommended capacity. The newly leaked screenshots, courtesy of Twitter user wxnod(opens in new tab), showed the GeForce RTX 4090 operating at 2,730 MHz. The Ada flagship has a 2,230 MHz base clock and a 2,520 MHz boost clock. Therefore, the GeForce RTX 4090 was running above Nvidia's specifications. The GPU's temperature was 65.6 degrees Celsius, with the hot spot at 74.4 degrees Celsius. Those are great results considering that the cooling fans were only at 40% of their capacity. The graphics card was seemingly drawing 446.9W, so it's safe to assume it was running at stock without overclocking. The second screenshot revealed the GeForce RTX 4090 with a peak clock speed of 3,135 MHz. It would seem that the temperatures didn't go up substantially. GPU-Z recorded 68.2 degrees Celsius, a 4% increase over the previous result. The power consumption jumped up to 492.8W, around 10% higher. Sadly, the Twitter user didn't provide any context to the screenshots, so we don't know what workload the GeForce RTX 4090 was executing or whether manual overclocking was involved. The GeForce RTX 4090 will launch on October 12 at $1,599. However, the premium models with fancy designs and liquid coolers will probably retail for nearly $2,000. The GeForce RTX 4080 won't be far behind, with a scheduled launch next month at $1,199 for the 16GB model and $899 for the 12GB variant. Zhiye Liu is a Freelance News Writer at Tom’s Hardware US. Although he loves everything that’s hardware, he has a soft spot for CPUs, GPUs, and RAM. LINK
  5. Name of the game: Fallout 4 Price: $4.99 US Link Store: HERE Offer ends up after X hours: WEEKEND DEAL! Offer ends 18 October Requirements: Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system OS: Windows 7/8/10 (64-bit OS required) Processor: Intel Core i5-2300 2.8 GHz/AMD Phenom II X4 945 3.0 GHz or equivalent Memory: 8 GB RAM Graphics: NVIDIA GTX 550 Ti 2GB/AMD Radeon HD 7870 2GB or equivalent Storage: 30 GB available space
  6. Ever since 1993, when Master of Orion first appeared on MS-DOS and Macintosh, PC games have been tirelessly setting out to the stars, seeking to explore, unite, and conquer unknown planets and galactic civilisations in compelling galactic campaigns. Where the likes of Civilization have covered the 4X genre right here on Earth, there have been myriad games taking the well-trodden Explore, Expand, Exploit, Exterminate path into the vastness of space. Now, a new 4X venture from Iceberg Interactive and Rhombus Studios, Lord of Rigel, is about to make its first expedition into Steam Early Access, hoping to go where no space-based 4X game has gone before. In a galaxy that's on a warpath, you take control of one of ten vastly distinct species. Will you be the Warlord of the newly united tribes of the feline Katraxi, using industry and war to overcome your rivals? Will you pursue the goals of the mysterious insectoid Aranaid or Ornithon? Or perhaps you want to extend the galactic influence of humans, espousing the virtues of democracy and diplomacy to create a united cosmos (while firmly bringing into line those who would seek to undermine that noble goal). Once you choose your species, you'll begin your journey on a home planet where you must research the necessary technologies for survival. Stabilise your home front with things like barracks, colony bases, and hydroponic farms, but don't linger for too long, because there's a whole galaxy and hundreds of stars to explore, and each turn your rivals are extending their own influence across them. Through a combination of procedural generation and smart AI factions that will adapt to the unique conditions a given game map presents, your every campaign through Lord of Rigel will be different, shaped by the emergent stories and challenges of that particular run. There's a good reason that 4X games keep players transfixed for so many hours - they're endless story generators - and Lord of Rigel aims to harness all that is great about this venerable genre while offering its own slant. Each action you take in relation to other factions will affect the overall galactic tension. Take an aggressive stance, and this will have a destabilising effect on the cosmos, which in the full release will speed up the game's Doomsday clock. Seek the path of peace through trade, mutual aid, and alliances, and you may find yourself at the head of the Galactic Council, pushing for a diplomatic victory. But your campaigns aren't just shaped by the actions of you and other factions. In this cosmos, many events are driven by two so-called Elder Races, the Rigelans and Arcturans, who are locked in a simmering conflict over control of the galaxy. They will seek to disrupt and sabotage your progress, via war and more cunning means, and you'll often be presented with events and threats stemming from these enigmatic beings. Their overbearing influence will be felt throughout your campaign, and you'll need to be both powerful and shrewd if you're to survive the impending Final War instigated by the Elder Races. Of course, the game's journey has just begun, but even in Early Access it's already expansive, with eight playable species and a vast galaxy of procedural possibilities. The final game will offer three different victory types, but at this nascent stage of Early Access you can only win by conquest. So ready those battleships, planet killers, and biological weapons, and prepare to fight for supremacy of the galaxy. LINK
  7. I know that's too late but Happy Birthday buddy, an great & amazing ex-member of CSBD staff, wish u all the best in ur life mate, hope we can see u again around @Mr.Sebby 💜
  8. According to a recent Chiphell forum post, Nvidia's GeForce RTX 4080 16GB was seen benchmarked in 3DMark TimeSpy while overclocked to an impressive 3GHz clock speed. At 3GHz, the chip outperformed Nvidia's previous generation RTX 3090 Ti (overclocked to 2,200MHz) by 3,500 points in the same benchmark. The RTX 4080 16GB can be seen clocking up to 3000MHz flat in a GPU-Z screenshot shown in the Chiphell forum post. But most impressively, the 4080 is operating at the 3GHz peak while maintaining its default power rating of 320W, with a peak power rating of 333W measured on GPU-Z. Temperatures were also very good at 60C. This is very different from the 3GHz RTX 4090 results we've seen online, where the end-user was forced to run the GPU at 600W of power consumption to hit these very high clock speeds. If the 4090 16GB 3DMark results are true , it appears to show us that lower core count models will have better overclocking capabilities compared to the RTX 4090. But for now, take this data with a grain of salt since the RTX 4090 and RTX 4080 16GB review embargos have not yet been lifted. However, once we get the cards in for testing, we'll better understand how well these GPUs can really overclock. But, overall, it appears like Nvidia's Ada Lovelace architecture - operating on the TSMC 4N node, does have enough headroom to achieve a flat 3GHz clock speed, no matter the SKU. Of course, the silicon lottery could play a role in how many GPUs achieve 3GHz flat. However, we wouldn't be surprised if most RTX 40 series GPUs can hit this targeted frequency based on the results we're seeing now for the RTX 4080 and RTX 4090. TimeSpy Score Analysis The RTX 4080 16GB achieved at 28,929 point graphics score in 3DMark's TimeSpy benchmark (the non-extreme version). This puts it exactly 3,518 points - or 13.8% ahead of the best RTX 3090 Ti result we found on 3DMark's benchmark browser - which features 25,411 points in the graphics score, with a hefty overclock of 2265MHz. Unfortunately, we don't have any RTX 4090 TimeSpy results to compare against, so take this result for what you will. Again, RTX 4090 reviews will be out soon, so we'll have a better idea of how fast this 3GHz 4080 is once 3rd party reviews - and our own review, is out for the 4090! LINK
  9. Name of the game: Company of Heroes 2 Price: $1.99 US Link Store: HERE Offer ends up after X hours: WEEKEND DEAL! Offer ends 13 October Requirements: Memory: 2GB RAM Processor: 2Ghz Intel Core2 Duo or equivalent Graphics: 512MB Direct3D 10 capable video card (GeForce 8800 GT or Radeon HD 2900XT) OS: 32bit Vista Internet: Broadband Internet connection Hard Drive: 30GB free Hard disc space
  10. Following a barrage of complaints and criticism, Blizzard is dropping a requirement to have phone numbers attached to Battle.net accounts "for a majority of existing Overwatch players(opens in new tab)." SMS Protect, as it's called, originally required all Overwatch 2 players, on all platforms, to have a phone number attached to their Battle.net account in order to play the game. It's a fairly basic 2FA system, but the idea is that it won't just help players protect their accounts, but also help Blizzard to take more control over who can access Overwatch 2. "SMS Protect helps verify ownership of your account in the unforeseen event of an account compromise," Blizzard said(opens in new tab). "Similarly, if a disruptive player has been suspended or banned, SMS Protect makes it more difficult for them to return to the game." The problem is that SMS Protect is excluding certain players for reasons unrelated to their in-game behavior. Each Battle.net account requires a separate number, which could exclude households with multiple Overwatch fans and a shared phone line, and perhaps worse, "certain types of numbers, including pre-paid and VOIP, cannot be used for SMS Protect." That potentially locks out a large chunk of people even though they do have a unique phone number, especially younger players who can't, or just don't want to, sign up for a multi-year phone contract. Prior to today's decision, the requirement held even for those who purchased Overwatch, which is no longer available to play now that it's been replaced with Overwatch 2. "I played Overwatch from almost day one and I loved it. It's the entire reason I enjoy competitive games in the first place," redditor WavePheonix(opens in new tab) wrote. "Now, a few days before launch, I wanted to get around to linking my phone number to my account. Come to find out, I can't play because I have a pre-paid plan and I'm devastated. I can't just change my phone plan for one game and now despite me paying the money, playing all the betas, and having been a fan for years I don't think I'll ever get to play it." "So...what happens in a household that only has one phone number...but multiple people?" Chromeglow(opens in new tab) asked. "Blizzard really isn't expecting people to get another phone number just to play their game, right?" "I have Cricket wireless. It's what my family can afford. Idk what else to say," RLmclovin(opens in new tab) wrote. "I'm not going to tell my family that we should switch because of a video game. Now I can't play overwatch. I'm really sad about this. I've been playing with friends and family for years, now I can't play with any of them because of my phone plan." LINK
  11. Geographic Information Systems (GIS) refers to a computer system that collects geographical information and allows us to analyse these spatial datasets. GIS is widely used in map-oriented mobile phone applications that enable people to order food, check traffic data or navigate. Constantly updated information via GIS also assists in long-term weather predictions and efficient traffic management within a city. This tool has a place in the field of wildlife as well, specifically in the avenue of research. Researchers working for the Indian conservation non-profit Wildlife SOS use this software technology to study and track animals like Sloth bears and elephants. Out of the four bear species found in India, Sloth bears are the most ubiquitous and widespread. A significant part of the global Sloth bear po[CENSORED]tion namely in the Western Ghats, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, West Bengal and north-east India. With an estimated po[CENSORED]tion of 6,000 to 11,000 in the wild, the Sloth bear is classified as ‘Vulnerable’ on IUCN’s Red List and protected under Schedule I of the Indian Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972. Sloth bears are quite adaptive and occupy a wide range of habitats like grasslands, scrublands, dry, and moist tropical forests. However, their ability to also thrive near human habitation also makes them more vulnerable to anthropogenic risks. Continuing habitat loss pushes Sloth bears to frequent human-dominated areas including orchards, agricultural fields and even villages. This leads to numerous encounters with humans, creating a negative perception of the bears. The field team of Wildlife SOS has been conducting research on Sloth bears to identify conflict points in those forested areas that lie on the fringes of human settlements. One way to track the animals’ movement is through radio collars which can transmit their location, and warn people of their proximity. However, it is an impossible task to radio-collar each Sloth bear in a vast forest. Furthermore, the data acquired may be insufficient to understand the behaviour patterns of these animals. To fulfil their study, researchers also rely on collateral data collected from animal markings using camera traps. Camera traps are set up at multiple locations in the hope of sighting a bear and following its movement. Other visual data gathered include claw marks and scratches on trees, pugmarks, Sloth bear dens, dug-up termite mounds, and animal excrement. These findings require researchers to mark each location coordinate for future reference. The raw data collected still requires time, patience and a standardised methodology to assimilate in order to arrive at desired conclusions. In other words, this data is like an uncut diamond that awaits careful polish. This is where GIS comes in! With the GIS software, all collected coordinates can be placed across a map of the area under study to be analysed. The software organises data in an orderly manner to show the areas where there is a concentration of Sloth bears, locations where conflicts are likely to occur and places where human and bear mortality are high. LINK
  12. Foxconn, a Taiwanese electronics firm that is one of the main manufacturers of Apple iPhones, is planning to enter the automotive space with the Foxtron Model B. A full reveal of the Model B is coming on October 18, but Foxconn has already given a good look at the hatchback’s Pininfarina-penned exterior design. Initial production of the Model B will take place in China next year, but the company says that the hatchback will be built at Foxconn’s Lordstown, Ohio assembly plant starting in 2024. You might not be familiar with the name Foxconn, but you certainly know its biggest product: the Taiwanese electronics company is one of the leading iPhone manufacturers. The firm is also looking to expand into the automotive space. In 2021, Foxconn purchased the Lordstown assembly plant in Ohio from struggling EV startup Lordstown Motors. Now Foxconn has given the first look at a new electric hatchback, the Foxtron Model B, that it plans to eventually build in the United States. Foxconn has provided minimal information so far about the Model B, with the EV set to be fully unveiled on October 18. You may have noticed that the brand name associated with the Model B is not Foxconn, but Foxtron—this vehicle is part of a joint venture between the electronics maker and Yulon Motor, Taiwan’s largest automaker which has built Nissans under license for decades and also created its own brand, Luxgen. While Foxconn is tight-lipped about specifications, the video does show off the Model B’s design, which was penned by Italian design house Pininfarina. The compact car has its large, flashy wheels pushed out the corners, while the front and rear ends are dominated by full-width LED light bars. The smooth bodywork is accentuated by a stylized C-pillar, and a unique feature in the taillights appears to display images to communicate with pedestrians. The Model B will ride on Foxconn’s open-source MiH platform—which stands for Mobility in Harmony. The platform will also underpin two additional models previously revealed by Foxconn, the Model C, a larger crossover, and Model E, a luxury sedan. The platform supports single and dual-motor setups, and Foxconn claims a range of 435 miles from the Model C and 466 miles for the Model E. LINK
  13. In a new series sharing stories about the artwork in Australian homes, Alice Gage shows the painting she commissioned for her husband’s birthday Alice Gage’s family portrait originated as an idea to celebrate family life post-lockdown. “Like all families, we went through a lot during Covid – when the pandemic started our daughter was three, and our son was only five months old, so we basically spent his first two years in our back yard,” says Gage, who lives in Sydney’s Arncliffe. “It was really hard, but there was a lot of joy in it, too. David built a treehouse. We pitched the tent and had fires. We cooked a lot outside.” “I wanted to have a family portrait painted for my husband’s 40th birthday that celebrated him as a dad, and everything we are as a family.” She hoped a painting would “capture us on the other side of the lockdown – that we had thrived, and managed to find laughter within the daily struggles”. Gage had commissioned art before, when she was the founder and editor of Ampersand magazine. The artist, Melbourne-based Edie Atkins, “is an old friend of mine and I adore her paintings. I saw on Instagram that she had done commissioned work for someone else, so I approached her.” Gage sent Atkins a strip of photobooth pictures to work from. “She put together a bit of a composite of them. I also sent her photos of the back yard when our unmistakable orange trees were in fruit. We worked together on colouring and detail, but mostly I trusted Edie and let her do her thing.” “There is a naivety in it – a sweetness – that reminds me of childhood. To me, it represents a distinct moment in time, when the children were so little and we were stuck in the backyard. I’m proud of us in the picture and I know it’s something I will grow even more fond of as time passes, and one day the kids will cherish [it] also.” Given the work’s success, Gage is keen to try again. “I hope it’s not the last portrait we’ll commission of ourselves – why stop at one?” we have a small favour to ask. Millions are turning to the Guardian for open, independent, quality news every day, and readers in 180 countries around the world now support us financially. We believe everyone deserves access to information that’s grounded in science and truth, and analysis rooted in authority and integrity. That’s why we made a different choice: to keep our reporting open for all readers, regardless of where they live or what they can afford to pay. This means more people can be better informed, united, and inspired to take meaningful action. In these perilous times, a truth-seeking global news organisation like the Guardian is essential. We have no shareholders or billionaire owner, meaning our journalism is free from commercial and political influence – this makes us different. When it’s never been more important, our independence allows us to fearlessly investigate, challenge and expose those in power. Support the Guardian from as little as $1 – it only takes a minute. If you can, please consider supporting us with a regular amount each month. Thank you. LINK
  14. In March 2020, Gov. Doug Ducey signed into law a sweeping set of measures designed to help curb rising rates of suicide and expand access to mental health treatment for Arizona residents with and without insurance. Commonly known as Jake’s Law, the legislation was named after Jake Machovsky, a 15-year-old who died by suicide in 2016 after his family’s insurance denied an inpatient stay for mental health treatment. The law marked a major stride toward achieving mental health parity in Arizona, which is when insurers provide the same level of service for behavioral health and substance abuse treatment as they do for other physical ailments. It also expanded access to mental health treatment by letting schools refer uninsured and underinsured students to mental health providers—and by paying for those services when families couldn’t afford them on their own. Since Jake’s Law was enacted, hundreds of eligible students have accessed mental health treatment they may not have otherwise received. The state has paid for nearly $1.4 million in services using the $8 million Children’s Behavioral Health Services Fund created by the law, which campus mental health professionals interviewed by AZCIR heralded as an “incredible addition” to how they address youth mental health needs. Yet, two years into the program, more than half of Arizona schools haven’t referred students under the law. Among traditional districts and charter systems that have opted in to refer, uneven staffing for school counselors and social workers has led to an unknown number of students getting overlooked for treatment. Fewer than 700 students qualified to use the state fund out of nearly 8,000 referred from June 2021 through June 2022, as the money is only available after all other payment options—such as public grants or Medicaid—are exhausted. Even after students are referred for treatment, parents must give permission for their children to receive services and find time to get their children to off-campus appointments if they aren’t available at school. A statewide shortage of mental health providers means districts sometimes don’t have nearby options to refer students for help. These obstacles are concerning in a state where 70% of youth who experienced a major depressive episode in the year before the pandemic did not receive treatment. Suicide is the second-leading cause of death in Arizona for those aged 10 to 19. “I know there are students who do need services and aren’t receiving them,” said Rebecca Carrier, counseling coordinator for Tucson Unified School District. Overall, though, Carrier believes the ability to use this new fund for students in need is a positive: “No one’s denied under Jake’s Law,” she said. Jake’s Law helps address post-pandemic mental health fallout When Jake’s parents, Denise Schatt-Denslow and Ben Denslow, found a volunteer lobbyist willing to help with their cause, they focused their efforts on bringing Arizona’s laws more in line with federal mental health parity. In other words, they wanted to stop health insurers from handling coverage of mental health and substance abuse treatment differently than how they handled coverage of physical conditions. The parity element has taken longer to implement than the student behavioral health fund, according to Carly Fleege, the volunteer lobbyist who helped shape and pass the law. After two years of back-and-forth with insurers, the changes to state parity rules will go into effect Sept. 4, 2022. To improve mental health parity in Arizona, the law created a website to educate residents about what insurers should be offering and how to file insurance complaints. It also required state-regulated insurers to provide a customer service line on insurance cards, mandated that insurance companies file reports to the state every three years detailing their compliance with state and federal parity laws, and created a Mental Health Parity Advisory Committee housed in the Department of Insurance and Financial Institutions. Fleege said developing a fund to help families pay for services that were otherwise out of reach was in large part made possible by then-Sen. Kate Brophy McGee, the Phoenix Republican who sponsored the bill and encouraged the family to add the Children’s Behavioral Health Services Fund to the legislation. LINK
  15. Human rights groups from Russia and Ukraine – Memorial and the Center for Civil Liberties – have won the Nobel Peace Prize for 2022, along with the jailed Belarusian advocate Ales Bialiatski. The new laureates were honored for “an outstanding effort to document war crimes, human right abuses and the abuse of power” in their respective countries. “They have for many years promoted the right to criticize power and protect the fundamental rights of citizens,” the Norwegian Nobel Committee said. Their win comes seven months after Russia waged a full-scale war on Ukraine, with the assistance of Belarus. That ongoing conflict loomed heavily over this year’s award, and it had been speculated that the committee would seek to pay tribute to activists in the affected nations. The Ukrainian group, Center for Civil Liberties, has “engaged in efforts to identify and document Russian war crimes against the Ukrainian civilian po[CENSORED]tion” since the invasion was launched in February, the committee said.“In collaboration with international partners, the center is playing a pioneering role with a view to holding the guilty parties accountable for their crimes.” The head of the Center for Civil Liberties said the group was “proud” to win the prize, calling it “a recognition of work of many human rights activists in Ukraine and not only in Ukraine.”Oleksandra Matviichuk, the organization’s head, said on Facebook she was “happy” that the Center had received the prize “together with our friends and partners.” She also called for the creation of an international tribunal to prosecute Russian President Vladimir Putin and Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko for war crimes. Matviichuk also said Russia should be “thrown out” of the UN Security Council for what she called “systemic breaches of the UN Charter.” Memorial was founded in 1987 and, after the fall of the Soviet Union, became one of Russia’s most prominent human rights watchdogs. It has worked to expose the abuses and atrocities of the Stalinist era. The group was shut down by Russian courts in the past year, in a major blow to the country’s hollowed-out civil rights landscape. Bialiatski, meanwhile, has documented human rights abuses in Belarus since the 1980s. He founded the organization Viasna, or Spring, in 1996 after a referendum that consolidated the authoritarian powers of president and close Russian ally, Lukashenko. The activist was arrested in 2020 amid widespread protests against Lukashenko’s regime. “He is still detained without trial. Despite tremendous personal hardship, Mr Bialiatski has not yielded an inch in his fight for human rights and democracy in Belarus,” the committee said. Belarusian opposition politician Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya congratulated Bialiatski. “The prize is an important recognition for all Belarusians fighting for freedom & democracy,” she wrote in a tweet. “All political prisoners must be released without delay.” LINK
  16. Nick Movie: Blockbuster Time: / Netflix / Amazon / HBO?: Netflix Duration of the movie: / Trailer:
  17. Live Performance Title: Sezairi x KALEB J - It's You Signer Name: Sezairi x KALEB J Live Performance Location: / Official YouTube Link: Your Opinion About the Track (Music Video): 7/10
  18. Nick Movie: ONI: Thunder God's Tale Time: / Netflix / Amazon / HBO?: netflix Duration of the movie: / Trailer:

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CsBlackDevil Community [www.csblackdevil.com], a virtual world from May 1, 2012, which continues to grow in the gaming world. CSBD has over 70k members in continuous expansion, coming from different parts of the world.

 

 

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