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Monday, May 2, 2016

Albrighton: Leicester players will watch Tottenham game together

Albrighton: Leicester players will watch Tottenham game together

The Foxes could be crowed champions on Monday should Mauricio Pochettino's men fail to win at Stamford Bridge and the winger says his side cannot ignore the game
Marc Albrighton says Leicester City 's squad intend to spend the night together watching Premier League rivals Tottenham 's trip to Chelsea on Monday.
Following Leicester's 1-1 draw at Manchester United on Sunday, anything other than a Spurs victory at Stamford Bridge will see Claudio Ranieri's men crowned champions with two games to spare.
Ranieri himself will be on a flight from Italy and is unable to watch the match that could seal a stunning success for the pre-season relegation candidates, but Albrighton says the playing squad will gather to cheer on last season's champions Chelsea.
"We have got to watch it - I don't think we can ignore this one," he told Sky Sports.
"I didn't watch last week but when there is a chance to win the league, like this week, we have all got to watch it and I think we will probably spend the night all together."
video link: http://www.goal.com/en/news/1862/premier-league/2016/05/02/23033962/albrighton-leicester-players-will-watch-tottenham-game#share=true&playerID=c42aaeda9729fd1287b0d0e35d.r4lvn28jkqnw13l43y1upde5k&time=11&vid=jxh0860yhjuk151cq7m6p9woh
Albrighton, 26, is one of three players - captain Wes Morgan and goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel being the others - to have appeared in all 36 of Leicester's games this season.
Despite missing their first chance to wrap up the title at Old Trafford, the winger does not think there is any frustration in the camp.
He added: "I wouldn't say we were dejected. We came to win the game and to wrap up the title, but it wasn't to be.
"We were probably thinking what could have been and that we could have been over there celebrating with our fans, but we have still got another couple of chances to do that and hopefully 

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Credit goes to : Goal.com

Unicycles are totally the next immersive video game experience

Motion controllers are supposed to make video games more immersive. That promise has been broken in the past (looking at you, Nintendo), but it holds true in the early days of virtual reality rigs like the HTC Vive and the Oculus Rift. Of course, some men just want to watch the world burn, which is why I'm not surprised that Ricardo Quesada — the excitable wig-adorned man you see in the video above — taped an iPhone to the pedal of his unicycle so he could use it to play a video game. Quesada, a developer who goes by "retro.moe," calls his creation the "UniJoystiCle™." (Get it?) It controls a Commodore 64 game called Uni Games that he also built. Quesada cheekily describes the whole package on his website as a "unique immersive experience, much better than VR." "SIMPLE, YET ROBUST!" Quesada didn't just pull this idea out of nowhere — he's part of a group based in Berkeley, California that goes off-road unicycling in their spare time. (In fact Uni Games appears to be an 8-bit recreation of that experience.) He's made all the source code available for download, as well as the game (which is emulator compatible, but you know you'd rather play it on a Commodore 64 with a 5 1/4-inch floppy disk). But the best part is he's continuing to support the idea, releasing firmware updates and tweaking the source code to make it better. Hey, it's cheaper than an Oculus. Data Source: http://www.theverge.com/

Flyboard Air sets world record for farthest hoverboard flight



WHOA

Well, It Looks Like Someone Actually Invented A Real Hoverboard

Franky Zapata popped up a few weeks ago with a brief look at a new, Green Goblin-esque hoverboard. We weren't 100% sure it was real, but now he's back and he flew the dang Flyboard over 7,000 feet. So, this seems like a legit hoverboard?
Read More: http://www.theverge.com/2016/4/30/11535778/franky-zapata-guinness-world-record-hoverboard-flyboard-air

Talks Seek to Extend Fragile Syrian Truce to Northern City of Aleppo

BEIRUT, Lebanon — Secretary of State John Kerry said on Monday that negotiations were underway to extend a fragile cease-fire agreement in Syria to the embattled northern city of Aleppo, which has been nearly torn apart by a surge of violence in recent weeks. Mr. Kerry was in Geneva to meet with Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem of Syria; Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir of Saudi Arabia; the United Nations special envoy for Syria, Staffan de Mistura; and other officials. “We’re getting closer to a place of understanding” on Aleppo, Mr. Kerry said. “But we have some work to do, and that’s why we’re here.” Mr. Jubeir offered a forceful account of the situation in Aleppo, which before Syria’s five-year-old civil war was a thriving commercial and cultural center. “What is happening in Aleppo is an outrage,” he said. “It’s a violation of all humanitarian laws. It’s a crime.” He directly accused President Bashar al-Assad of Syria of violating a cease-fire agreement that has steadily eroded since it was arranged in February, despite American and Russian backing. “There is only one side that is flying airplanes, and that is Bashar al-Assad and his allies, so they are responsible for the massacre of women, children and the elderly,” Mr. Jubeir said. “They are responsible for the murder of doctors and medical personnel, and this situation, any way you slice it, will not stand. The world is not going to allow them to get away with this.” Although Aleppo is dominating the headlines, Mr. Kerry’s broader priority is reviving the delicate temporary truce that had appeared to hold until recently. In noting that the partial truce had fallen apart in some parts of Syria, Mr. Kerry acknowledged what has been clear for more than a week on the ground: The relative respite from violence brought by the two-month reduction in hostilities has come to a resounding end in many areas — especially Aleppo, where more than 200 people have died in the past week, most of them civilians. About two-thirds of those deaths have been on the rebel-held side of town, which is being pummeled anew by airstrikes and by bombs dropped from helicopters, including on a hospital. But both sides have demonstrated a disregard for civilian life, with rebels firing mortar shells and missiles last week toward most of the government-held neighborhoods in Aleppo, in one of their worst barrages in recent months. Yet as Mr. Kerry carries out shuttle diplomacy to try to revive the partial truce, it has been renewed in several areas, though not in Aleppo, where it is needed most. The Syrian Army said in a statement on Monday that a temporary truce in the suburbs of Damascus and in the coastal province of Latakia would be extended for an additional 48 hours. The Tass news agency in Russia quoted Lt. Gen. Sergei Kuralenko, head of the Russian coordination center in Syria, as saying only that talks about a cease-fire for Aleppo were continuing. The sticking point is apparently an unwillingness on the part of Russia to tell the Syrian government to stop its aerial bombardments on insurgent-held areas there. Mr. Kerry, as well as residents and opposition figures, insist that the Syrian government’s warplanes, in a campaign aided by Russia, are predominantly hitting areas not controlled by the Nusra Front, which has only a small presence in the city of Aleppo. Instead, they are believed to be striking areas controlled by other insurgent groups, including some backed by the United States and its allies. The United States is considering whether to draw up a detailed map of so-called safe zones, in which civilians and member of moderate opposition groups could seek shelter from attacks by Mr. Assad’s military, The Associated Press reported. It was not immediately clear whether Russia would accept such a plan or whether Moscow could persuade the Assad government to respect the zones. Such an agreement is also unlikely to be helpful if the sides cannot agree on what constitutes the violations the monitors are supposed to be watching for. Even if so-called hard lines were drawn on a map, and civilians and insurgents not affiliated with the Nusra Front were encouraged to go there, the plan would face major practical problems, given the difficulty of moving safely within the city. Rebel groups might not agree to give up areas that Russia believes are held by the Nusra Front, arguing that, in fact, they are held by local opposition fighters and seeing the plan as a ploy to allow the government to take them back. Anne Barnard reported from Beirut, and Sewell Chan from London. News Credited by: New York times http://www.nytimes.com/

Toronto weather: Monday, May 2

Posted: May 02, 2016 6:30 AM 
Mainly cloudy skies are in the forecast for Monday with a rain showers in the morning and a high of 14 C.
Mainly cloudy skies are in the forecast for Monday with a rain showers in the morning and a high of 14 C. (Canadian Press)
Good morning! Make sure to grab your umbrella as you head out the door, rain showers are in the forecast for your Monday commute.
As of 6 a.m. it was 7 C in Toronto. Mainly cloudy skies are expected today with showers this morning, which should end around noon, and a high of 14 C.
Some of the clouds are supposed to clear off this evening with an overnight low of 3 C.
Mixed bag of weather for your work week
Clear, sunny skies will return tomorrow with a high of 16 C — but then clouds will start to roll in late in the day.
Those clouds are expected to stick around through your Wednesday and Thursday with a 40 per chance of showers both days. 
The sun should be back again for the start of your weekend. Friday a mix of sun and clouds are expected with a high of 19 C.
Credited By Nicole Brockbank, CBC News 

Sports Authority to close all stores nationwide

Sports Authority has reached the end of the line. 
Two months after announcing it planned to close about 140 stores, the Colorado-based company has decided to sell its remaining assets, according to a report on Forbes.com.
Rather than attempt to re-organize under Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, Sports Authority will hold an auction May 16.
Sports AuthoritySports Authority plans to close all its remaining stores after selling its assets at an auction later this month. 
The Sports Authority stores on the chopping block were the locations in East Brunswick, Cherry Hill, Wayne, Manalapan and Piscataway. Now the other 16 stores in New Jersey appear to be on the verge of shutting their doors for good.
If a buyer emerges, some locations could be saved, according to Forbes. There are 463 Sports Authority stores in 41 states employing more than 14,500.
A $300 million loan is due in May 2017, BusinessInsider.com reported.
The chain expanded considerably through the acquisition of competitors beginning in 1997, taking its present form following five mergers. With stores in 41 states and in Puerto Rico, Sports Authority was once the nation's leading sports retailer but has slipped to fourth place behind competitors including Dick's Sporting Goods.