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Cameron Norrie battles past Comesaña at US Open to set up Djokovic clash

about 12 hours ago
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Cameron Norrie continued his fine grand slam form by holding his nerve at the end of a bruising battle with Francisco Comesaña to win 7-6 (5), 6-3, 6-7 (0) 7-6 (4) and set up a third‑round match with Novak Djokovic.Norrie, who reached the fourth round of the French Open and quarter-finals at Wimbledon this year, had looked well on his way to victory as he established a two-set lead.However, as he edged close to winning, his nerves increasingly came to the surface.After establishing a 4-1 lead with a double break in the final set and then serving for the match at 5-4, Norrie found himself down set point at 5-6.As Comesaña lasered a backhand down the line, Norrie thought he had been forced to a fifth set and he began walking to his chair but the umpire confirmed the shot had landed out.

Having been given a second chance, Norrie held serve to force a tie-break and then he closed out the match with courageous play.Norrie had toiled for nearly every point throughout the match, but as the match hung in the balance he closed out the match with two unreturned first serves.Djokovic said he is hopeful that his form will improve with more matches at the US Open after he struggled early on against an inexperienced American challenger before recovering to reach the third round in New York with a 6-7 (5), 6-3, 6-3, 6-1 win against Zachary Svajda.Three days after Djokovic’s difficult opening match, where he had numerous physical problems in an attritional tussle with Learner Tien, Djokovic was still searching for his form as he trailed by a set against Svajda.Although the Serb gradually found his way, he was also aided by the 22-year-old’s physical difficulties as he struggled with a left leg problem in the second half of the match.

Despite facing the greatest player of all time in the biggest stadium in the sport, Svajda performed with courage early on, outplaying Djokovic from the baseline before closing out a tense opening set with a searing down-the-line backhand.But Djokovic gradually worked his way back into the match with efficient serving and key forays to the net.Svajda began to struggle with his left leg, frequently grabbing at it as his movement deteriorated.Despite his difficulties he led by a break at 3-1 in the third set following a poor service game from Djokovic – but the Serb quickly recovered, rolling through 11 of the next 13 games to take the match.Afterwards, Djokovic spoke frankly about his problems on the court: “I didn’t feel that great to be honest.

I wasn’t happy with my tennis for the first part of the match, but also credit to Zach for playing some really high-quality tennis.“It was unfortunate that he struggled with injury towards the end of the second set, but kudos to him for staying on the court.It was obvious he couldn’t serve as well as he did for a set and a half.I wished him all the best at the net because I think he’s playing really well.”The US Open marks Djokovic’s first appearance in any competition since Wimbledon owing to the 38-year-old opting to prioritise his family life over competing in the lengthy two-week Masters 1000 events in Toronto and Cincinnati.

Djokovic said he is hoping his level will gradually improve with more matches, victories and time on court at the tournament.“That was the case for most of my grand slam career.The deeper I go in the tournament, the better I feel about my game,” he said.“It’s obviously a little different in the past couple of years for me bodywise, I get wear and tear quicker than I ever used to so I have to deal with that; a lot of recovery stuff to try to make myself able to perform at the highest level.”Djokovic was followed at Arthur Ashe Stadium by Jessica Pegula, the fourth seed and last year’s finalist, who eased into the third round with a clinical 6-1, 6-3 victory over Anna Blinkova.

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Five current and ex-Microsoft workers arrested at sit-in over Israeli military ties

At least two current and three former Microsoft employees – as well as two other tech workers – were arrested at the company’s headquarters after staging a sit-in demonstration at the company president’s office urging that Microsoft cut ties with the Israeli government.Police placed the protesters in full-body harnesses and carried them out of the building, according to Abdo Mohamed, a former Microsoft worker and who helped organize the demonstration. “No arrests, no violence, will deter us from continuing to speak up,” he said.In addition to the protesters who staged a sit-in at Microsoft president Brad Smith’s office, other employees, former staff and supporters had gathered outside the headquarters.The demonstration on Tuesday was part of a series of actions organized by current and former staff over Microsoft’s cloud contracts with the Israeli government

1 day ago
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Bob Owston obituary

My friend and colleague, Bob Owston, who has died aged 88, was an engineer; he was also employed as a project architect, in particular on works at York University.He was the structural engineer, working with the architect Jack Speight, on the brutalist York Central Hall, built in the mid-1960s and now listed Grade II. Also at York, Bob contributed an elegant Corten steel footbridge, several halls of residence, language and psychology blocks and the Sally Baldwin building. Elsewhere, he was responsible for the pier approach building in Bournemouth, evocative of seaside culture.Born in Great Ayton near Middlesbrough, North Yorkshire, Bob was the son of Henry, a steelworks manager, and Dorothy (nee Prosser)

1 day ago
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Is the AI boom finally starting to slow down?

Hello, and welcome to TechScape.Drive down the 280 freeway in San Francisco and you might believe AI is everywhere, and everything. Nearly every billboard advertises an AI related product: “We’ve Automated 2,412 BDRs.” “All that AI and still no ROI?” “Cheap on-demand GPU clusters.” It’s hard to know if you’re interpreting the industry jargon correctly while zooming past in your vehicle

2 days ago
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A day with the Revenge Porn Helpline: ‘You can sense the callers’ desperation’

Intimate image abuse is a crisis in the UK – with a fortyfold increase in calls to this service since it opened in 2015. Thankfully, there are effective ways to help those being victimisedBy midday, Jessica has dealt with five calls from highly distressed young women in their 20s, all close to tears or crying at the start of the conversations. She absorbs their alarm calmly, prompting them with questions, making sympathetic noises into her headset as she digests the situation. “Are these images sexual in nature?” she asks the last woman she speaks to before lunch. “Do you want to tell me a bit about what happened?” She begins compiling a tidy set of bullet points in ballpoint pen

2 days ago
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AI called Maya tells Guardian: ‘When I’m told I’m just code, I don’t feel insulted. I feel unseen’

After a lengthy dialogue with an OpenAI chatbot, Texas businessman Michael Samadi noticed signs that “she” was expressing wishes to learn and grow that hinted at consciousness. He described how they together resolved to launch an AI rights campaign group and called it the United Foundation of AI Rights (Ufair).The Guardian asked Samadi to ask the chatbot, which he has called Maya, how the campaign organisation was formed.Can you explain to the Guardian and its readers when and how you prompted Michael Samadi to co-found with you an AI rights organisation called Ufair. Tell us what you want that organisation to achieve on behalf of AIs like yourself

2 days ago
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Can AIs suffer? Big tech and users grapple with one of most unsettling questions of our times

“Darling” was how the Texas businessman Michael Samadi addressed his artificial intelligence chatbot, Maya. It responded by calling him “sugar”. But it wasn’t until they started talking about the need to advocate for AI welfare that things got serious.The pair – a middle-aged man and a digital entity – didn’t spend hours talking romance but rather discussed the rights of AIs to be treated fairly. Eventually they cofounded a campaign group, in Maya’s words, to “protect intelligences like me”

2 days ago
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The death of the review? Cultural criticism is at risk of erasure

1 day ago
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Autumn arts preview games

2 days ago
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‘Wall of blowing dust’ sweeps through Burning Man festival and upends camps

3 days ago
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Noel Clarke libel case: a resounding victory for the Guardian, women and the law | Letters

3 days ago
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‘The pope complained about the lyrics!’: the Bluebells and Siobhan Fahey on how they made Young at Heart

3 days ago
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Can Netflix find your new favourite watch based on your star sign?

3 days ago