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TWG Tea Haute Coutoure Tea Brings Elegant Moments, Vibrant Canvas of Thai Fashion in a Teacup (Sponsored)

BANGKOK — TWG Tea unveils the 100th exquisite tea blend from the Haute Couture Tea Collection® to celebrate the 10-year milestone of the brand’s iconic Haute Couture Tea Collection® and Thailand’s most sensation fashion event, Bangkok International Fashion Week. A black tea elegantly blended with sweet notes of caramel and rose, the Haute Couture Tea is a perfect expression of a fleeting moment and an ode to the luxury tea brand’s culture of innovation and limitless creativity.

TWG Tea was the first brand in the world to infuse style into a teacup in the form of the Haute Couture Tea Collection®. Mirroring the fashion calendar, the collection introduces trendsetting creations four times a year, in line with the seasons and reflecting the brand’s cosmopolitan appeal. “We draw inspiration from the most coveted trends, observing the latest in style, design and cultural shifts from our travels. The circumstances that influence fashion influence the rest of the world,” says Taha Bouqdib, TWG Tea President, CEO & Co-Founder. The luxury tea brand creates unique and original tea blends that perfectly capture these elusive moments – and the Haute Couture Tea Collection®, continues to be an elemental line of the brand, associating its modern culture of tea appreciation with fashion, luxury and lifestyle.

The brand’s imagination and audacious flair are also evident in its now-iconic packaging. Taking cues from the fashion world, the Haute Couture Tea Collection® fashions the latest trends in colour and design into highly attractive, stylish packaging to match its vivacious blends. “We designed our packaging to be a canvas for our luxurious blends, incorporating splashes of bright modern hues and playful fluorescents, as well as whimsical illustrations which were unheard of before in the tea industry,” says Mr. Bouqdib. The Haute Couture Tea Collection®, now a notable part of the brand’s fabric, is recognised as an affordably-priced luxury experience that appeals to modern tea lovers.

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In a dynamic marketplace, TWG Tea recognises the importance of surprising and inspiring customers with new and different products to tantalise the palate. Extensive amounts of time are spent in TWG Tea’s blending laboratory in Singapore to conceiving artisanal flavours perfected with masterful blending, exquisite craftsmanship and the use of quality ingredients such as spices, herbs, flower petals and essential oils. With each release showcasing the best of the season in a teacup, TWG Tea continues to lead in taste and refinement, impressing with luxurious creations that preserve the passing of each moment.

Stylishly packaged in luxurious hues of blush pink and gold, the Haute Couture Tea retails at THB1,360 and is now available at all TWG Tea Salons & Boutiques in Thailand. For more information, please call 0-2259-9510.

About TWG Tea

TWG Tea, the finest luxury tea brand in the world, was established in Singapore and celebrates the year 1837 when the island became a trading post for teas, spices and fine epicurean products. TWG Tea, which stands for The Wellbeing Group, was founded by Taha Bouqdib, Maranda Barnes and Rith Aum-Stievenard in 2008 as a luxury concept that incorporates unique and original retail outlets, exquisite tea rooms and an international distribution network to professionals. Committed to offering teas directly from source gardens, TWG Tea’s collection is the largest in the world, with fine harvests from every tea producing country and exclusive hand crafted tea blends. Internationally recognised as a true innovator with the creation of new varieties of tea every season in collaboration with the world’s most renowned estates, TWG Tea also offers exquisite signature modern tea accessories and delicate tea-infused sweets and savouries.

After launching its first Singapore tea salon & boutique at Republic Plaza in 2008, TWG Tea has opened in iconic destinations such as ION Orchard, Marina Bay Sands and Takashimaya Singapore. Expanding its presence internationally, TWG Tea has heralded the opening of exquisite Tea Salons & Boutiques in Bangkok, Dubai, Guangzhou, Hong Kong, Kuala Lumpur, Taipei, Tokyo, Manila, Jakarta and Shanghai.  In addition, TWG Tea’s exclusive collection of the finest teas of the world is available from TWG Tea Boutiques in Harrods Knightsbridge, London and Dean & DeLuca Madison Ave, New York. The premier tea supplier to the finest hotels, restaurants and international airlines, TWG Tea is retailed around the world in gourmet épiceries, including El Corte Ingles in Portugal, Feinkost Kaefer in Germany, David Jones in Australia and GUM in Moscow, Russia, and served in Business Class, First Class and Suites and in the Lounges of Singapore Airlines and Nippon Airways.

TWG Teas are available in Singapore, Australia, Azerbaijan, Belgium, Cambodia, Canada, China, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Germany, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, Kuwait, Malaysia, Maldives, Mauritius, Mexico, Morocco, New Caledonia, New Zealand, Pakistan, Philippines, Portugal, Qatar, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Seychelles, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Taiwan, Thailand, Turkey, Ukraine, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom, the United States of America, and Vietnam. European online orders can be made atwww.Harrods.com; online orders within the USA can be made at www.DeanDeluca.com; Canadian orders may be made online at www.VansingDG.com; worldwide online orders can be made directly from the TWG Tea e-Boutique and m-Boutique at TWGTea.com.

Follow us on social media and tag us with #TWGTeaOfficial #TWGTeaTH and #TWGTeaHauteCoutureTea

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Asian Markets Trend Lower, Tracking Wall St Losses

An investor walks in front of private stock trading boards in November at a private stock market gallery in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Photo: Yam G-Jun / Associated Press
An investor walks in front of private stock trading boards in November at a private stock market gallery in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Photo: Yam G-Jun / Associated Press

BANGKOK — Markets in Asia are mostly lower after a lackluster day of trading on Wall Street.

Mixed signals on the progress of China-U.S. trade talks also revived caution in Chinese markets. The Shanghai Composite lost 1 percent to 3,059.17 in early trading Wednesday and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng fell 0.5 percent to 29,318.53.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 index edged 0.1 percent higher to 21,577.82, while the S&P ASX 200 gave up 0.1 percent to 6,177.50. South Korea’s Kospi sank 1.1 percent to 2,154.23.

Shares were higher in Taiwan, Thailand and Indonesia but fell in Singapore.

Investors are looking ahead to the Federal Reserve’s interest rate policy update due later Wednesday. The central bank has signaled that it will be “patient” in raising interest rates.

“Against the backdrop of heightened concerns over U.S.-China trade and ahead of the Fed meeting, Asia markets may well trade cautiously once again,” Jingyi Pan of IG said in a commentary. She added that “the broad sense is that regional markets will be attuned toward the Fed meeting.”

U.S. stock indexes closed mostly lower Tuesday after a late-afternoon splash of selling erased early gains, ending a weeklong rally.

Banks accounted for much of the decline, along with utilities and industrial companies. Those losses offset gains in health care, technology and consumer products stocks.

The benchmark S&P 500 ended barely lower, losing less than one point to 2,832.57, its second loss over the past seven trading days. It’s still up 13 percent so far in 2019.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 0.1 percent to 25,887.38. The Nasdaq composite gained 0.1 percent to 7,723.95, while the Russell 2000 index of smaller-company stocks gave up 0.6 percent, to 1,554.99.

More stocks fell than rose on the New York Stock Exchange. Major indexes in Europe finished higher.

The Fed has made clear that with a dimmer economic picture in both the United States and globally, it no longer sees the need to keep raising rates as it did four times in 2018. Among the key factors, besides slower growth, are President Donald Trump’s trade war with China, continually low inflation levels and Prime Minister Theresa May’s struggle to execute Britain’s exit from the European Union.

White House officials said Tuesday that top U.S. trade and economic officials will visit China late next week for another round of negotiations on their dispute over Beijing’s industrial policies and other issues.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer will lead the delegation, Trump administration officials said. The sources spoke on background because they weren’t authorized to comment publicly.

The scheduled talks suggest the two sides believe they can make at least some progress, though they’re taking place at a time when administration officials had previously hoped to sign an agreement at Mar-a-Lago, the president’s Florida resort. Business lobbyists say an agreement now probably won’t be reached until late April.

 

Currencies

The dollar rose to 111.59 Japanese yen from 111.40 yen. The euro slipped to USD$1.1346 from $1.1351 on Tuesday.

 

Energy

Benchmark U.S. crude oil lost 16 cents to $59.13 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It gave up 9 cents to close at $59.29 a barrel on Tuesday. Brent crude, the international standard, slipped 3 cents to $67.58 a barrel.

Story: Elaine Kurtenbach

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Pro-Junta Politico Says Coup Awaits Opposition Win

Soldiers are deployed on the streets of Bangkok during a coup on May 22, 2014.

BANGKOK — A pro-junta politician said Wednesday a coup would be staged if opponents of the military regime win the election.

Benya Nandakwang, MP hopeful for Action Coalition of Thailand Party, also slammed anti-junta factions’ dream of winning at the polls as wishful thinking, since the government already has the stage set to its advantage.

“Do you really think you can just ‘pick up a pen and kill the dictatorship?’” Benya wrote online, referring to a slogan of the pro-democracy camp. “Dream on. Do you know how to play chess? Look at the game. They already have their pieces set on the board.”

“Personally, I think if the hell money democracy faction wins the election, eventually there will be another coup. Wanna see it?” Benya added.

Similar to others in her pro-establishment party, Benya helped lead a street protest that culminated in a coup which brought Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha to power in 2014.

Her remarks also appeared to reference arson attacks blamed on Redshirt supporters in the wake of a May 2010 military crackdown on their street protests. Many netizens criticized Benya for alluding to the overthrow of an elected government even before Thais vote on Sunday.

“Am I living in the time when insurrection can be announced openly?” user Narunart Zonine Kumpa wrote in a Facebook news thread.

“Let’s screencap her name. This amounts to insurrection,” Wittawat NK Suwan wrote.

“Where’s the fun if she spoils the ending for us like this?” user Sadaharu Ner wrote in a status.

Later Wednesday afternoon she posted a video in which she confronts zombie voters and politicians.

“The zombies are back. They can’t be killed, whether with laws or rules,” Benya says in the video. “Let’s stop this abominable cycle.”

The controversy comes at the time in which anxiety is growing among pro-democracy factions that the election result may not be respected by the ruling junta if it favors the opposition. Army chief Gen. Apirat Kongsompong himself hasn’t ruled out another putsch if he perceives the government to be corrupt.

He also pledged to only support a government loyal to the royal family, a vow seen as a jab at the opposition, who’s routinely accused of plotting to overthrow the monarchy.

The Election Commission has until early May to formally endorse the results. An academic who studies Thailand’s armed forces warned that the junta may seek to invalidate the poll by any offense it can find in the meantime. They might also simply launch a coup as a last option if its defeat becomes clear.

“The junta is not stupid. They may look stupid, but they are not,” lecturer Paul Chambers said Tuesday night at a panel discussion in Bangkok. “This election will be very important to them because the junta has to survive.”

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Expert Explains How Airplane Crash Investigations Work

A Lion Air Boeing 737 Max 8 lands in January in Papua province, Indonesia. Image: Raja Video Id / YouTube
A Lion Air Boeing 737 Max 8 lands in January in Papua province, Indonesia. Image: Raja Video Id / YouTube

By Daniel Kwasi Adjekum, The Conversation

The fatal crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 has resulted in the worldwide grounding of Boeing 737 Max aircraft. Investigators are probing the crash and another like it that occurred less than five months earlier in Indonesia.

As an experienced airline pilot, aircraft accident investigator and professor of aviation, I know that such major crash investigations are an enormous effort often involving many countries’ governments and input from dozens of industry partners. The inquiries can take months of painstaking work. They often yield important insights that improve flight safety for everyone long into the future. Here’s how an investigation generally goes.

 

A Massive Collaboration

The accident investigation process is laid out by the standards and recommended practices in an international agreement called Annex 13 of the Convention on International Civil Aviation. That document outlines the process of gathering and analyzing information and drawing conclusions – including determining the causes of a crash and making safety recommendations.

The government of the country where the crash occurred takes the lead in the investigation. Also involved are investigators from the countries where the aircraft is registered, where the airline’s headquarters is, where the aircraft designer is based and where the aircraft was assembled. Countries where the engines or other major aircraft components were designed and assembled and those with citizens killed or seriously injured in the crash may also take part in the investigations.

The Ethiopian Airlines crash is under investigation by Ethiopian authorities, with the assistance of members of the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board. Other countries – including Kenya, France, Canada, China, Italy and the U.K., which all lost several citizens in the crash – may ask to be part of the process.

Ethiopian investigators can seek technical advice not only from participating countries’ representatives, such as the NTSB, but also from the companies that made the plane and its engines – in this case, Boeing and CFM international, respectively.

 

From Emergency to Inquiry

At the beginning of the inquiry, the investigator-in-charge, usually an investigator from the lead country’s aviation safety board, coordinates with local first responders to determine what hazards may be present at the crash site, and ensures safe access for investigators to visit the wreckage. Dangerous debris could include hazardous cargo, flammable or toxic materials and gases, sharp or heavy objects and pressurized equipment. Human remains or blood from injured victims may also pose dangers of disease, meaning investigators must protect themselves against viruses, bacteria or parasites.

The investigators on the scene take photos and videos of the wreckage and collect as much physical evidence as they can. They also conduct interviews with eyewitnesses and draw charts showing the debris field and any indications of how the aircraft hit the ground, such as the angle of impact, the distribution of debris and other details.

If parts of aircraft can be salvaged, they can be moved to a secure facility such as a hangar for wreckage reassembling. This can assist in determining missing or damaged components, and gaining a fuller idea of what happened.

Investigators also collect all the documents related the plane, its crew and its recent flights for forensic analysis.

An early priority is locating the crucial evidence in what are often called the plane’s “black boxes.” There are two kinds. The flight data recorders keep track of flight parameters such altitude, heading, instrument readings, power settings and flight control inputs. The cockpit voice recorders store all communications with the aircraft, including from air traffic controllers, and record any conversations among cockpit occupants and other audible cockpit sounds for the two hours leading up to the crash. All that information lets analysts reconstruct, and even create video simulations of, the last moments of the plane’s flight.

If either of those devices is damaged, authorities may ask the aircraft’s manufacturer to verify the salvaged data. Ethiopian investigators have asked for foreign help to analyze the black-box data. They originally asked Germany’s Federal Bureau of Aircraft Accident Investigation, but that agency said it didn’t have the technical know-how either. France’s Bureau of Enquiry and Analysis for Civil Aviation Safety, one of the most experienced crash investigation agencies in the world, is handling them instead.

In the early stages of an investigation, there are a lot of people working on different aspects of the inquiry all at once. As the preliminary lead accident investigator for the Ghanaian MI-17 helicopter crash in Adukrom, Ghana, in January 2007, I had to coordinate the securing of the crash site and do field interviews of witnesses while charting the debris and recovering the “black box” for further analysis.

 

Technical Groups Assemble

Other teams look at technical aspects that might have contributed in any way to the crash. They look at air traffic control activity and instructions, weather, human performance issues like crew experience and training, maintenance records, emergency response, safety equipment, aircraft performance and subsystems.

They may disassemble the crashed plane’s engines or other components and use flight simulators to attempt to experience what the pilots were dealing with. Analysts even study the metals used to make components to see how they should perform – to later compare that information with what actually happened during the crash.

A team also interviews any survivors, rescue personnel and subject-matter experts. Forensic teams and medical examiners will analyze victims’ remains to identify them for family members and to examine the injuries they suffered, and test for any drugs, alcohol or even carbon monoxide in their bodies that might have impaired their judgment or performance.

In some cases, especially high-profile crashes, investigators will hold public hearings, at which they gather more evidence and make public some of what they have found. This helps assure the public that the process is open and transparent, and is not covering up the responsibility of any guilty party.

 

Findings and Conclusions

After they rigorously analyze all the data, devise, test and evaluate different hypotheses for what could have happened, the investigative team must determine causes and contributing factors. The goal is to identify anything – acts someone did (or didn’t) do, properties of a materials, gusts of wind, and so on – that had any role in the crash.

The report should include both immediate causes – such as active failures of pilots or maintenance crew – and underlying reasons, like insufficient training or pressure to rush through a task.

Within 30 days after the crash, the investigation team must release a preliminary report to the International Civil Aviation Organization, the U.N.-related global agency overseeing commercial air travel. A final report is normally expected to follow before a year has passed. In cases where a final report can’t be issued on that timeline, the team should release an interim report on each anniversary of the event, detailing the progress so far.

 

Improving Safety

At any point during the investigation, investigators can recommend any preventative action that it has identified as necessary to improve flight safety. In the wake of the Lion Air crash, Boeing was reportedly working on a fix to a software system, but it didn’t get released before the Ethiopian Airlines crash.

The final report, including all the safety recommendations, is released by the country that conducted the investigation to the public and is aimed at improving aviation safety and not to apportion blame.

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Trump: Never Was, Never Will Be Fan of Sen. John Mccain

Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., speaks in 2008 at a rally in Tampa, Florida. Photo: Carolyn Kaster / Associated Press
Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., speaks in 2008 at a rally in Tampa, Florida. Photo: Carolyn Kaster / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Carrying a bitter personal feud beyond the grave, President Donald Trump escalated his attacks on the late Sen. John McCain on Tuesday, declaring he will “never” be a fan of the Vietnam war hero and longtime Republican lawmaker who died last year of brain cancer.

“I was never a fan of John McCain, and I never will be,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office.

The fresh vitriol followed Trump’s weekend tweets insulting the 2008 Republican presidential candidate, with whom he long had a fractious relationship. He repeated some of those attacks, complaining about McCain’s vote against repealing President Barack Obama’s health care law.

“He campaigned on repealing and replacing Obamacare for years and then it got to a vote and he said thumbs down,” Trump said, adding – without citing evidence – that the repeal would have “saved a trillion dollars.”

Over the weekend, Trump attacked McCain on Twitter. Among his barbs was that the longtime Arizona senator had been “last in his class” at the U.S. Naval Academy. But while McCain famously racked up demerits and earned poor grades, he ultimately graduated fifth from the bottom of his 1958 class.

Those attacks drew retaliatory fire from McCain’s daughter, Meghan McCain.

“He spends his weekend obsessing over great men because he knows it and I know it and all of you know it – he will never be a great man,” said Meghan McCain, on ABC’s “The View,” which she co-hosts.

Trump targeted McCain during his presidential campaign, saying in 2015 that the former prisoner-of-war was not a hero, “because he was captured.” Trump received a series of deferments to avoid serving in Vietnam, including one attained with a physician’s letter stating that he suffered from bone spurs in his feet.

Story: Catherine Lucey

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Opinion: PGA Tour Study Shows Disparity in Ranking Points

Sergio Garcia, of Spain, holds his trophy at the green jacket ceremony after the Masters golf tournament in 2019 in Augusta, Georgia. Photo: David Goldman / Associated Press
Sergio Garcia, of Spain, holds his trophy at the green jacket ceremony after the Masters golf tournament in 2019 in Augusta, Georgia. Photo: David Goldman / Associated Press

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Florida — Two tournaments on different continents illustrate why PGA Tour players are increasingly skeptical about the world ranking.

Against a field as strong as some majors, Tommy Fleetwood shared the lead after 18 and 36 holes, played in the final group and was still in the mix at The Players Championship until a tee shot into the water on the 17th hole. His three-way tie for fifth was worth 16.53 ranking points.

Earlier that day, Guido Migliozzi won his first European Tour title at the Kenya Open, which until this year was a Challenge Tour event. The strength of its field was slightly weaker than the Boonchu Ruangkit Championship on the Asian Development Tour in January.

Migliozzi received 24 ranking points, the minimum for the European Tour.

It’s like that just about every week somewhere in the world. It’s been like that for the better part of 20 years.

The Official World Golf Ranking tries to measure golfers from 20 tours around the world, from the PGA Tour to the Nordic Golf League. It’s an impossible task that the OWGR, which dates to 1986, has largely gotten right. Or at least close enough.

The question is whether that’s good enough.

“The world ranking has the first 35 to 40 correct,” said Charles Howell III, who in February returned to the top 50 in the world for the first time in 11 years. “I’m not saying I should have been there, or that any other player should have been there. I’m saying that the world ranking is so darn important that No. 40 through 100 … you’ve got to get that right.

“If world events and majors have entry based on the world ranking, then it better be an accurate, good system.”

Augusta National is two weeks away from awarding a Masters invitation to the top 50 in the world. In late May, the world ranking determines who gets in the U.S. Open (top 60) and British Open (top 50).

The PGA Tour has heard enough complaints from enough players and their managers that after meeting with the OWGR board last summer, it commissioned a study by a pair of mathematicians that revealed what many already suspected about the allocation of points around the world.

It’s not that PGA Tour events are not getting enough ranking points, but that other tours are getting too many.

According to two people in a meeting last week at the TPC Sawgrass, the tour wants the OWGR board to conduct its own analysis to see if the results are similar. They spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the PGA Tour has not commented publicly on the study.

The tour has a seat on the OWGR board, as do other tours.

Does it matter that winning the Kenya Open was equal to fourth place at The Players Championship? Not yet. Migliozzi moved up 377 spots to No. 199.

But it mattered to Justin Harding, a 33-year-old South African who finished in a three-way tie for second at the Kenya Open and moved up four spots to No. 48 in the world, giving him a reasonable shot at getting into the Masters.

Harding has won five times over the last 10 months – twice in South Africa, twice in Asia, once on the European Tour in the Qatar Masters.

Points are determined by who is playing any given week. The No. 1 player in the field is worth 45 points, with 37 points for No. 2 player, all the way down to two points for players from No. 81 to 100, and one point for everyone from No. 101 through 200. There is also is a “home tour” bonus.

The Players Championship had 882 points. The Kenya Open had 17 points. The field points for Harding’s five wins were 5, 7, 12, 5 and 61.

“It needs work. It needs a lot of work,” said Brooks Koepka, who speaks from the experience of having started on the Challenge Tour in 2012, worked his way to the European Tour, then the PGA Tour and eventually reached No. 1 in the world last year.

The PGA Tour already has strength in numbers.

Throw out the majors and the World Golf Championships, and the average ranking points for PGA Tour winners last year was nearly 19 points more than Europe. And it figures to get stronger. Ten years ago, the PGA Tour had 39 of the top 50 players in the world to start the year. It had 46 of the top 50 to start this year.

The concern might be making the PGA Tour so strong that it’s hard for players from around the world to advance unless they all came to America.

That’s not good for world golf.

“European players who come here are good here,” said Rafa Cabrera Bello of Spain, in his third year as a PGA Tour member. “My argument would be deeper down the field. It’s more packed here. I may be a little more skeptical when you’re not playing against the best players and you’re getting lots of points.”

The OWGR board meets at the Masters and at the British Open. Any change is not likely to occur soon, as badly as some players want it.

The PGA Tour this week is in Tampa, with 37 of the top 100 in the world, including Dustin Johnson at No. 1. The European Tour is in Malaysia, which has nine of the top 100 players, none higher than No. 70.

Story: Doug Ferguson

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Goodbye Console? Google Unveils Game-Streaming Platform

The controller for Google's new video-game streaming platform called Stadia, positioned to take on the traditional video-game business. The platform will store a game-playing session in the cloud and lets players jump across devices operating on Google's Chrome browser and Chrome OS, such as Pixel phones and Chromebooks. Image: Google
The controller for Google's new video-game streaming platform called Stadia, positioned to take on the traditional video-game business. The platform will store a game-playing session in the cloud and lets players jump across devices operating on Google's Chrome browser and Chrome OS, such as Pixel phones and Chromebooks. Image: Google

NEW YORK — Google on Tuesday announced a video-game streaming platform called Stadia, positioning itself to take on the traditional video-game business.

The platform will store a game-playing session in the cloud and lets players jump across devices operating on Google’s Chrome browser and Chrome OS, such as Pixel phones and Chromebooks.

Google didn’t say how much its new service will cost, whether it will offer subscriptions or other options, or what games will be available at launch —all key elements to the success of a new video-game platform. It said only that Stadia will be available in late 2019.

Google made the announcement at the Game Developers Conference in San Francisco. Some industry watchers were expecting a streaming console, but Google’s platform centers squarely on the company’s cloud infrastructure.

“The new generation of gaming is not a box,” said Google Vice President Phil Harrison. “The data center is your platform.”

Much like movies and music, the traditional video-game industry has been shifting from physical hardware and games to digital downloads and streaming. Video-game streaming typically requires a strong connection and more computing power than simply streaming video, since there is real-time interaction between player and game. Google says it is leveraging its data centers to power the system.

Alphabet Inc.’s Google said playing video games will be as simple as pressing a “Play Now” button, with nothing to download or install. An optional dedicated Stadia controller will be available. The WiFi-enabled controller has a button that lets players launch a microphone and use Google Assistant to ask questions about the games being played. Another button lets users share gameplay directly to Google’s video streaming service, YouTube.

Harrison said he expects all gaming will eventually take place outside consoles, in cloud-powered streaming platforms similar to what Google announced. But not right away.

“It won’t replace traditional games devices overnight,” he said in an interview after the announcement. “And we wouldn’t be here if not for the existing traditional platforms.”

CFRA Research analyst Scott Kessler said Google’s approach that ties YouTube sharing and video-game playing is unique.

“It is not necessarily at this point the easiest thing for people to livestream their games and now you can do it with the push of a button,” he said. “What they’ve done with Stadia is to connect and unify both the gaming platform and the streaming platform which obviously is new.”

The company said Stadia will be available in late 2019 in the U.S., Canada, the U.K. and parts of Europe. Google showed demos of “Assassin’s Creed Odyssey” and “Doom Eternal.” More information about games and pricing is due this summer.

The U.S. video game industry raked in revenue of $43.4 billion in 2018, up 18 percent from 2017, according to research firm NPD Group.

BTIG Managing Director Brandon Ross said Stadia will be a positive for game publishers “assuming that it works and works at scale, which is a big assumption.”

That’s because the platform could bring in players not willing to spend the money upfront for a gaming PC or a console.

“What they’re presenting is a feasible way to play videogames in the cloud, and utilizing the cloud so you can play anytime, anyplace and anywhere,” he said. “There’s no friction, including the friction of upfront hardware costs.”

Ross added that Google’s platform could set up a distribution battle between Microsoft, which owns the Xbox, Sony, which owns the PlayStation, Google and perhaps Amazon, which reportedly is working on its own video-game service, as they race to lock down distribution of the most in-demand games.

To that end, Google launched Stadia Games and Entertainment which will develop Stadia-exclusive games.

“The differentiator for any of the distributors on a console or in the cloud is going to be available content,” he said.

Harrison said Google will rely on outside publishers and game developers to provide many of the games available on the platform. But having its own inside studio will also allow the company to fully test and make use of new features.

“We can be the advance party, so to speak, and we can be testing out the latest technology,” he said. “Once we’ve proven it we can help bring that up to speed on the platform even more quickly with our third-party partners.”

Harrison acknowledged Google faces stiff competition from longtime rivals Microsoft, Sony and others. Google has been working on Stadia for more than four years, he said, and has been working with game developers through Android and Play Store for longer.

The others have more than a decade of experience. But Google believes it brings something new.

“We are not a historical console or PC platform,” he said. “We are built specifically for this new generation.”

Story: Mae Anderson

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Nat Geo Making Doc on Thai Cave Heroes

Caving expert Robert Harper, at left, and rescue diver Richard William Stanton, at middle, outside the Tham Luang Nang Non cave complex in Chiang Rai province.

BANGKOK — After its adrenaline-filled entry won the Oscar for Best Documentary, National Geographic has begun production on a new feature about the foreign rescue divers whose perilous operation saved 13 trapped in a Chiang Rai cave.

“Thai Cave Rescue” is in the works by National Geographic Documentary Films to capture the heroic endeavour that brought the 12 footballers and their coach out alive of the Tham Luang cave complex.

Directed by Kevin Macdonald, the documentary is aiming to include interviews with local residents as well as British cave divers Richard Stanton, John Volanthen and others.

The documentary is scheduled for release in 2020 on Disney+, an upcoming video on-demand service based in Los Angeles.

“This rescue mission is more than just a story of hope, it’s a story of humanity coming together,” MacDonald said. “This film will represent a full 360-degree view of the crisis, told through unexpected angles and with untold stories.”

Macdonald’s filmography includes an Oscar-winning documentary about the 1972 murder of 11 Israeli Olympic athletes “One Day in September,” historical drama “The Last King of Scotland” and “Whitney,” a 2018 Whitney Houston documentary.

“Thai Cave Rescue” is not the first nor only movie revisiting the dramatic, two-week saga that unfolded in and around the cave last year.

Domestic production company DeWarrenne Pictures is expected to be first out of the gate with “The Cave” (“Nang Non”), while Thai officials said a Netflix original series was also being developed. Earlier this month, the government announced that the company, SK Global Entertainment, had been granted lifetime exclusive rights to control access to most of the key figures in the story including the boys and their coach.

The 13 Wild Boars will earn roughly 3 million baht from the announced Netflix production.

Related stories:

Thai Cave Rescue to Get Netflix Series: Officials

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Disney Closes $71b Deal for Fox Entertainment Assets

This image released by Twentieth Century Fox shows Ryan Reynolds in a scene from the film, "Deadpool." Photo: Joe Lederer / Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp. via Associated Press

Disney has closed its $71 billion acquisition of Fox’s entertainment business, putting “Cinderella,” ”The Simpsons,” ”Star Wars” and “Spider-Man” under one corporate roof.

The deal is likely to shake up the media landscape. Among other things, it paves the way for Disney to launch its streaming service, Disney Plus, due out later this year.

By buying the studios behind “The Simpsons” and X-Men, Disney aims to better compete with technology companies such as Amazon and Netflix for viewers’ attention – and dollars.

Disney needs compelling TV shows and movies to persuade viewers to sign up and pay for yet another streaming service. It already has classic Disney cartoons, “Star Wars,” Pixar, the Muppets and some of the Marvel characters. With Fox, Disney could add Marvel’s X-Men and Deadpool, along with programs shown on such Fox channels as FX Networks and National Geographic. Fox’s productions also include “The Americans,” ”This Is Us” and “Modern Family.”

The deal helps Disney further control TV shows and movies from start to finish – from creating the programs to distributing them though television channels, movie theaters, streaming services and other ways people watch entertainment. Disney would get valuable data on customers and their entertainment-viewing habits, which it can then use to sell advertising.

Disney CEO Bob Iger said in an earnings call in February that Disney Plus and other direct-to-consumer businesses are Disney’s “No. 1 priority.”

Cable and telecom companies have been buying the companies that make TV shows and movies to compete in a changing media landscape. Although internet providers like AT&T and Comcast directly control their customers’ access to the internet in a way that Amazon, YouTube and Netflix do not, they still face threats as those streaming services gain in popularity.

AT&T bought Time Warner last year for $81 billion and has already launched its own streaming service, Watch TV, with Time Warner channels such as TBS and TNT, among other networks, for $15 a month.

In addition to boosting the Disney streaming service, expected to debut next year, the deal paves the way for Marvel’s X-Men and the Avengers to reunite in future movies. Though Disney owns Marvel Studios, some characters including the X-Men had already been licensed to Fox.

Disney also gets a controlling stake in the existing streaming service Hulu, which it plans to keep operating as a home for more general programming. Family-friendly shows and movies will head to Disney Plus.

No pricing has been disclosed for Disney Plus. The streaming service will feature five categories of material: Disney, Pixar, Marvel, Star Wars and National Geographic. Disney charges $5 a month for ESPN Plus, a service that offers programming distinct from the ESPN cable channel.

Meanwhile, Fox Corp. — the parts of 21st Century Fox that are not part of the deal, including Fox News, Fox Sports and Fox Broadcasting — started trading on the Nasdaq under the “FOX” and “FOXA” tickers on Tuesday.

Story: Mae Anderson

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Philippines Seizes Drugs in Upscale Area, Arrests 4 Chinese

MANILA — Philippine authorities have seized more than 160 kilograms of methamphetamine concealed in tea wrappers in their second-largest drug haul this year in a sign of how the problem has persisted despite the president’s bloody crackdown on illegal drugs.

Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency chief Aaron Aquino says three Chinese nationals and a Chinese-Filipino man, who works as an interpreter, were arrested late Tuesday during “buy-bust” raids in an upscale residential enclave and outside a shopping mall in metropolitan Manila.

Aquino said Wednesday the drugs were concealed in tea wrappers similar to those seized in Malaysia, Thailand and Myanmar and indicated an international syndicate was behind the trafficking.

Thousands of mostly poor drug suspects have died in President Rodrigo Duterte’s crackdown on illegal drugs since he took office in mid-2016.

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