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¤ Nickname: DrAKeNN ¤ Grade: Player ¤ Tag: Master BoSS ¤ Link of Hours Played (GameTracker - Link): https://www.gametracker.rs/player/135.125.249.129:27015/DrAKeNN/
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Nickname: Pansher CSBD Age:21 Link with your forum profile:https://csblackdevil.com/forums How much time do you spend on our channel ts every day?: 3 - 4 hours Where do you want to moderate? Check this topic: Free time How much time you can be active on the Journalists Channel?: For me, all time Link with your last request to join in our Team: At least 6-7 hours per day Last 5 topics that you made on our section:
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Awhile back, Aston Martin announced that it would create some Aston Martin DB5 sports cars that replicate James Bond's car in the movie "Goldfinger." What really got our attention was that Aston Martin intended to give it functional gadgets. The company has finally provided a list of the details it intends to replicate, along with some samples of progress, and it's all quite impressive. The list of functional or semi-functional gadgets that will be included is extensive. About the only thing that won't operate is the passenger ejector seat, which is completely understandable. Otherwise, the car will have rotating license plates, extending bumper rams, an oil slick system, smoke screen generator a simulated radar screen in the center stack, switches under the armrest and shift knob and a weapons storage tray under the seats. Under the semi-functional list are the machine guns and raising bullet shield. We say semi-functional because the machine guns don't actually fire anything, and we doubt the bullet shield should be put to the test. he company also released video showing the progress on the smoke screen, oil slick and machine guns. The oil slick is easily the most impressive, as the dispenser deploys from behind the taillight and sprays in the same fan pattern from the movie. And it very clearly will spray liquid, though actual oil spray is probably inadvisable in real life. The machine gun, while not actually firing shots, is still impressive to see. It deploys from behind the turn signals, and it lights up and recoils in a very convincing manner. The smoke screen is less impressive after all this, but it still looks true to the movie, since it appears it will send smoke out the tailpipe. This car is turning out to be the ultimate piece of Bond memorabilia with its shockingly realistic and well-integrated gadgets. So we're inclined to agree with our West Coast Editor and resident Bond expert James Riswick that this is totally worth the 2.75 million pound price tag. And if you don't agree, you may find the Lego DB5 model more acceptable.
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I confided in a friend that my husband doesn’t contribute much financially – barely at all given mental health issues. Now I think the friend disrespects my husband. He and my husband have had their own direct friendship for some time now, which is especially important for my husband as he moved to a new city and appreciates this friendship. The financial imbalance between my husband and I has definitely been a sore point and cause of stress for us. We are working through it and we are hopeful to get things moving in a better direction. I regret sharing such personal information with my friend, but I felt I could trust him because we are close. But now when he talks to me in private he says things, on the face of it “jokingly”, asking if my husband has “grown the F up” yet. I feel terrible for my husband, and this also makes me question my marriage, which for every other reason I firmly stand by. I’ve considered trying to speak with him again to clarify, but this would then seem like I’m playing it down. How should I handle this? Eleanor says: I once heard a relationship counsellor remark that some kinds of trouble start with the first time you tell one of your spouse’s secrets to someone who isn’t your spouse. Obviously the rule can’t be that we’re never allowed to tell private things about our spouse to others. But it does risk making a strange kind of relationship with the confidante. It can end up feeling like that’s your close relationship, the place where you tell the unvarnished truth, and the marriage is just the place you go home to. As I think you might be feeling a miniature version of right now, it can lead the confidante to feel you have a kind of alliance together, in part defined by the fact you say things there that your spouse might not expect. This is a real shame, because being able to confide in your friends about things that tax you in your relationship is really important. The trick is balancing the risk of betraying the person we love by telling things they wouldn’t want us to against the risk of betraying ourselves by suffering indefinitely in loyal silence. So it’s a shame that your friend has started making jokes like this. Whether a given disclosure feels helpful or like betrayal depends a lot on how the other person responds. Their responses can help you process what you’re feeling. Or they can make it feel as if you’re in a secret making-fun-of-spouse club. Even if they come from a place of good humour or “lightening the mood”, it sounds as though these jokes are making it feel more like the latter. Happily, dynamics like that are often as easy to block as they are to create. You can stop this kind of mockery from being part of the common ground that this friendship permits. Performed bafflement can be great for this. People only make a mocking joke if they’re prepared to gamble they’ll get the laugh. If you make that gamble go badly – if you frown, seem surprised and block the supposition that this is the kind of thing we say around here – that can be a surprisingly effective social sanction. (It’s often a lot more effective than a half-laughed “don’t say that!” which risks feeling like lip service.) Remember, too, that these kinds of jokes can be ultimately counterproductive for sorting through the relationship issue. You say you stand by your marriage, but that this has been a hard sticking point. To process that, you’ll need to allow that there are more than just the two options of “love husband, no criticisms” on the one hand and “make fun of husband” on the other. You’ll need to find the third space where love and respect are compatible with criticism. By pairing honest criticism with unkind jokes, your friend is ultimately depriving you of that space, reinforcing the idea that criticism necessarily means disloyalty. One question here is how to handle the problem in the friendship. The other is how to handle the problem in the marriage. Try to be careful that each doesn’t wind up amplifying the other. https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2024/apr/12/i-told-a-friend-about-my-husbands-poor-finances-and-now-he-secretly-mocks-him-what-should-i-do
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Amid ever increasing demand for electricity, artificial intelligence (AI) is now being used to help prevent power cuts. "I woke up in the middle of the night very, very cold," remembers Aseef Raihan. "I pulled out my military sleeping bag, and slept in that overnight for warmth. "In the morning I figured out that the power was definitely not on." Mr Raihan is describing the scene back in February 2021 when he was stationed in San Antonio, Texas, while serving in the US Air Force. That month the state was blasted by winter storm Uri. As temperatures plummeted to -19C, Texans sought to keep warm, sending the demand for electricity sky high. At the same time, Texas' electricity grid started to unravel. Wind turbines froze over, snow covered solar panels, and a nuclear reactor had to be taken offline as a precaution. With not enough electricity to go around, the power went off for more than 4.5 million homes and businesses, first for hours, and then for days on end. "Without power, the heating wasn't working at all. And you couldn't use the electric stove or microwave for food," recalls Mr Raihan. In the end it took more than two weeks for the Texan power grid to return to normal. The storm revealed the fragility of the systems we take for granted to deliver us electricity around the clock. And while not all countries have winters as severe as they can be in North America, demand for electricity is ever increasing around the world. From charging electric cars, to more homes getting air conditioning installed, we are using more and more power in our daily lives. This comes at the same time as countries are increasingly moving towards renewable sources of energy, which are more variable in the amount of energy they generate. If the wind doesn't blow, and the sun doesn't shine, then electricity production drops. All this led to UK Energy Secretary Claire Coutinho warning last month that the country could face blackouts in the future without new gas powered power stations as "back up". Another way to make energy systems more resilient is by adding huge batteries to the grid. The storm revealed the fragility of the systems we take for granted to deliver us electricity around the clock. And while not all countries have winters as severe as they can be in North America, demand for electricity is ever increasing around the world. From charging electric cars, to more homes getting air conditioning installed, we are using more and more power in our daily lives. This comes at the same time as countries are increasingly moving towards renewable sources of energy, which are more variable in the amount of energy they generate. If the wind doesn't blow, and the sun doesn't shine, then electricity production drops. All this led to UK Energy Secretary Claire Coutinho warning last month that the country could face blackouts in the future without new gas powered power stations as "back up". Another way to make energy systems more resilient is by adding huge batteries to the grid. The thinking goes that when there is electricity going spare, batteries can charge up, and then release electricity later when there is more demand for power. This is an approach that has been taken in Texas. "Since the storm we built over five gigawatts of battery storage capacity in Texas in three years, which is really an incredible pace," says Dr Michael Webber, professor of energy resources at the University of Texas at Austin. That much energy, he says, is about "four large nuclear power plants". However, for such batteries to be really useful, they need to know the best time to charge, and the best time to discharge. That means making complex predictions about how much electricity is going to be needed in the future. "The main thing that makes the biggest difference is weather and electricity demand," says Gavin McCormick, founder of the tech start-up WattTime. His Oakland, California-based company makes AI software that predicts electricity supply and demand in a given area or region. This information can then tell batteries when to charge and discharge. The same information can also be used in homes to help people use mains electricity more cheaply. "So if you had an electric vehicle that you need to be ready in eight hours, but it only takes two or three hours to charge, what it can do is it can find the five minute periods all night where there's surplus energy, or maybe there's clean energy," Mr McCormick says. "It will charge in little spurts at all the best times and still be ready by morning." https://www.bbc.com/news/business-68768314
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A Spanish TV station has sacked a pundit after he made a controversial remark about Barcelona winger Lamine Yamal before their Champions League fixture against Paris St-Germain. German Burgos, working for Movistar, was speaking over footage of Yamal doing kick-ups when he made the remark. Burgos is reported to have said: "If it doesn't go well for him, he could end up at a traffic light." Barcelona and PSG refused to give interviews to Movistar after the game. "Movistar Plus+ condemns any kind of discrimination and will not allow this type of comment from any of the employees or collaborators linked to the platform," the broadcaster said on Thursday. The remark, which has been interpreted as a reference to people who perform at traffic lights and ask drivers for money, came before Barcelona's quarter-final first-leg win against PSG on Wednesday. Burgos has apologised for the comment. "It was a comment made without meaning to hurt anyone. We talk about football, nothing else. If he felt offended, I am sorry and I apologise publicly," he said. Burgos, 54, earned 35 caps for Argentina during his playing career and spent six years in Spain with Mallorca and Atletico Madrid. Yamal, 16, was born in Spain to Moroccan and Equatorial Guinean parents. The winger, who already has six caps for Spain, became the youngest player to appear in a Champions League quarter-final during the victory in Paris. https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/68787596
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Hamas's political leader Ismail Haniyeh has confirmed that three of his sons and four of his grandchildren were killed in an air strike in Gaza. Hamas-linked media said the car his sons were travelling in was hit in Al-Shati camp near Gaza City. Haniyeh said that the incident would not change Hamas's demands in talks aimed at reaching a ceasefire deal. Israel's military said the sons were members of Hamas's military wing - a claim denied by Haniyeh. The group was reportedly on its way to a family celebration to mark the first day of the Muslim holiday of Eid. Haniyeh told the broadcaster Al Jazeera that three sons - Hazem, Amir, and Muhammad - had remained in Gaza during the war. A statement from Hamas later said four of Haniyeh's grandchildren - Mona, Amal, Khaled and Razan - were among those killed in what they called the "treacherous and cowardly" strike. Haniyeh said he heard the news as he was visiting wounded Palestinians who had been taken for treatment to the Qatari capital, Doha, which is where the Hamas leader lives. "The enemy will be delusional if it thinks that targeting my sons, at the climax of the [ceasefire] negotiations and before the movement sends its response, will push Hamas to change its position," he told Al Jazeera. In comments reported on Hamas's Telegram channel, he thanked God for the "honour" bestowed on him by what he called the "martyrdom of his children and grandchildren". Israel's military said it had "eliminated three Hamas military wing operatives in the central Gaza Strip", adding that they were the sons of Ismail Haniyeh. The statement did not mention the reported deaths of Haniyeh's grandchildren. Speaking to Reuters on Thursday, Haniyeh denied that his sons were Hamas fighters. Who is Ismail Haniyeh and Hamas's other leaders? 'We are not fine': War casts shadow over Eid in Gaza As international pressure to reach a ceasefire deal grows, US President Joe Biden has sent the head of the CIA, William Burns, for the latest round of talks in Cairo. The latest proposal, which Hamas says it is analysing, reportedly includes the release of 40 Israeli hostages being held in Gaza in return for 900 Palestinians from Israeli jails. Haniyeh is widely considered Hamas's overall leader and has been a prominent member of the movement since 1980. He was elected head of Hamas's political bureau in 2017 and the US Department of State designated him a terrorist in 2018. These are not the first members of Haniyeh's family to have been killed in the war. Another son was reportedly killed in February, while his brother and nephew were killed in October, followed by a grandson in November. Hamas-led gunmen attacked Israel on 7 October, killing 1,200 people and taking more than 250 hostage. Israel says that of 130 hostages still in Gaza, at least 34 are dead. https://www.bbc.com/news/68783840
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One of the first Lists I ever wrote was titled "6 Trailblazing Shojo 'Deconstructions' You Should Be Watching." At the time, I wanted to write about other magical series that approached their formula the same way Madoka Magica was at the time, but the series I included weren't necessarily 'shojo' and looking back, I didn't make my point quite so well. Even at that time, I didn't know exactly how big of an effect Madoka Magica was going to have on the po[CENSORED]rity of dark magical girl shows, launching a full-blown sub-genre in just a few short years. If you're a fan of magical girls in increasingly dark and sometimes voyeuristic situations, then hopefully this list has your number. Madoka Magica It's not that magical girl stories hadn't ended in tragedy before Madoka Magica. It's actually incredibly common in older series like Fairy Princess Minky Momo, Nurse Angel Ririka SOS, and Sailor Moon, not to mention the cult hit Nanoha franchise. Madoka Magica just brought this niche interest to prominence for a wider audience, by killing off one of its leads in a gruesome fashion by the third episode and revealing its mascot as the team's main antagonist. The series also wasn't afraid to graphically illustrate its cast's emotional suffering, cementing it as a staple that would inform imitators for years to come. Uta∽Kata Uta Kata predates Madoka Magica and while it deals with similar psychological themes, its approach is less artistically abstract and more straightforward. It also wallows in its misery more overtly and keeps its mysteries close to its chest for the majority of its run. Middle-schooler Ichika Tachibana receives a magical amulet from Manatsu, a girl in a mirror, that lets her commune with djinn and briefly gain magical powers. Despite its magical girl trappings, the series hinges on its portrayal of psychological elements dealing with adolescence, mental illness (especially obsessive-compulsive disorder) and sexual abuse. il sole penetra le illusioni ~ Day Break Illusion Day Break Illusion is an original anime series spawned not long after Madoka Magica finished. Much of it seems directly cribbed from past influences with the horror drama turned way up, with monsters feeding on negative human emotions and transforming those people into monsters themselves. Much of the show's tragic tone relies on the character's guilt over killing humans, drawing even more direct parallels to Madoka Magica. It mostly stands out for more thoroughly expanding its magical cast and pulling themes from tarot cards, which is admittedly cool. Yuki Yuna Is a Hero Yuki Yuna may be more optimistic than its predecessors by the end, but the show still has no problem putting its magical girls through the ringer. The cast's use of their magical powers is directly tied to their physical health, which goes about how you might expect. The entire team loses the use of appendages, hearing, sight, or their voice before the final episode. The show turns things around by the end, but that doesn't mean the path there isn't plenty disturbing. Magical Girl Raising Project This brings us to the "magical girl death match" subgenre. Magical Girl Raising Project operates under the idea that there can be too many magical girls in one area, and when that happens they're going to cull the herd by pitting them against one another. This is when the story really gets dark for darkness' sake, making for a viewing experience that relies on having fun guessing who will die next, like you're rubbernecking a slowly unfolding disaster. Magical Girl Raising Project is a series dominated by villains and backstabbing, where the purehearted protagonist is pushed to her limits. Magical Girl Site If Magical Girl Raising Project is about an ongoing emotional trauma in the present, Magical Girl Site applies all that misery to its cast's pasts as well. Everyone in this show, from family to classmates to friends, is a horribly awful person, ramping the disaster-watch draw up exponentially. Every single character is either the victim of abuse or a perpetrator, and the story still manages to fit magical panties into the mix. Murderers are forgiven at the drop of a hat and your best friend will stick by you even if you're torturing some dude in your apartment. Magical Girl Special Ops Asuka This anime isn't even out yet, but the manga is readily available in English if you like your brooding magical girls with more action accessories and tragic baggage. Magical Girl Asuka Spec Ops is a military action spin on the concept with an alien invasion serving as the war that haunts its characters. Asuka battles PTSD and is heavily resistant to heroism unless it involves protecting someone she cares for deeply. Unfortunately for Asuka, duty always calls to keep aliens from destroying the world she cares about. https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/the-list/2018-07-22/.134507
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