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England keep sights on rugby’s Everest in relentless climb to game’s summit | Robert Kitson

about 19 hours ago
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After finally scaling Mount Everest with Tenzing Norgay on 29 May 1953 the first person Edmund Hillary encountered on his descent was his longtime climbing friend, George Lowe.“Well, George,” Hillary said, “we knocked the bastard off.” Which is basically how England’s captain, Maro Itoje, and his team felt on Saturday having lifted the Hillary Shield, named in honour of the indomitable New Zealander who conquered the world’s most famous summit.English rugby’s ultimate Everest is still up ahead of them, of course, in the form of the 2027 World Cup, but this was their South Col moment.And while a first home win against the All Blacks since 2012 and their second‑highest margin of victory in this 120-year-old fixture will both be sources of satisfaction there was also a powerful sense that their upwardly mobile trek is far from complete.

We shall return in a moment to the dark flip side of that proposition – that New Zealand are edging dangerously close to the abyss of unprecedented mediocrity – and South Africa obviously still stand head and shoulders above everyone else.But listening to Itoje on Saturday night was to sense that all involved with England are genuinely excited to find out just how much higher they can go.Their optimism is not simply fuelled by 10 wins on the spin, nor the coming of age of outstanding young prospects such as Guy Pepper, Henry Pollock and Immanuel Feyi-Waboso.Rather it is the depth of belief that England are beginning to build, their growing composure regardless of situation or opposition and the leadership example that is now revealing itself.Take Itoje’s morning-of-the-game address to his squad.

The hours before kick-off can be long and enervating but on Saturday the routine of poached eggs, porridge and protein shakes was not uppermost in the captain’s mind.Having tasted series victory with the British & Irish Lions in Australia less than four months earlier, he wanted to impress on the less experienced players just how much they should cherish the big days.“I’ve been fortunate enough to be around England for a while and to have been around professional rugby for a while,” Itoje said.“But sometimes it can just feel like a job … a normal job where you’re just showing up for training and showing up to games.Because you do it so regularly, sometimes you have to take a step back and actually realise where you are.

” So he urged them to think back to the fondest dreams they had as kids: of playing at a sold-out Twickenham, of facing the haka, of beating the mighty All Blacks,And, lo, so it came to pass that Maro and his young dreamers’ dearest wishes were granted,At 12-0 down they could have wilted; instead George Ford’s rat-a-tat drop goals gave them a foothold back in the contest, the home scrum is becoming “a weapon” to quote Itoje again, and there are also encouraging signs that England are thinking smarter and operating with greater clarity,There were numerous little snapshots but perhaps the best example arrived in the 54th minute,Clean lineout ball was not always England’s staple diet but this time Alex Mitchell sent a fizzing miss pass straight to Ollie Lawrence, thundering down the inside-centre channel.

The most obvious option was for Lawrence to continue thundering straight down the train tracks into contact, which is what the All Black midfield were clearly expecting.Instead, with a deftly flicked ball to his right, Lawrence found his centre partner Fraser Dingwall, wearing 12 but now deployed further out.If poetry in motion is a slight stretch, the unalloyed joy on Dingwall’s face as he arrowed through the gap to score would have warmed the stoniest English heart.Cunning variation, subtle subterfuge, inch-perfect execution … precisely the qualities, ironically, that were once New Zealand’s rugby hallmark.Sign up to The BreakdownThe latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewedafter newsletter promotionLook, maybe it’s too early to write off the Scott Robertson project but, goodness, the great “Razor” has his work cut out.

On this blunt-edged evidence the All Blacks’ 43-10 implosion against South Africa in Wellington in September was no blip and all that “lost aura” chatter is justified.Did you know Australia Under-18s have thrashed NZ secondary schools twice inside the past two months, racking up a total of 130 points in the process? Let’s just say the old impregnable All Black edifice is crumbling to a point where it is going to take a mighty effort to rebuild it.Which, ultimately, would be bad news for everyone, England included.The day the All Blacks fade to grey is the day rugby shrinks significantly in the global imagination, regardless of how good the Springboks and others continue to be.Perhaps the time really has come for New Zealand Rugby to ask themselves whether a South African-free Super Rugby Pacific competition is weakening their national team.

England, on the other hand, can now lift their eyes to the hills, with the World Cup draw scheduled for 3 December.Assuming they see off Argentina on Sunday, all is suddenly set fair, with the injured Ollie Chessum and Tommy Freeman among a number of extended squad members pushing for places in the 2026 Six Nations.Their captain is already convinced there is much more to come and that England can successfully shatter some other glass ceilings between now and 2027.“We want to get better,” Itoje said.“When I think about the squad, where we are and our desire to grow as a team, I think we can.

” English self-belief, in other words, is increasingly back.And as the late Sir Edmund Hillary once sagely observed: “It is not the mountain we conquer but ourselves.”
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GWR train fitted with F1 tech for two-month superfast wifi trial

Train wifi in the UK, long a source of frustration for passengers, is about to get radically faster – for a lucky few at least.A two-month trial has begun on one Great Western Railway (GWR) train, fitted with technology from Formula One that switches between the signals from 5G masts to low Earth-orbit satellites to provide almost seamless, superfast wifi.For now, only one of GWR’s 57 intercity express trains will have a connection good enough to deliver a Netflix series to the seat. However, a successful trial and the promise of lower costs could spell a wider rollout to the rest of the mainline railway by 2030.On a test run from London Paddington to Newbury and back, the Guardian found the wifi fast and reliable enough to video call editors at the office, catch up on old Match of the Days on iPlayer and listen to songs on YouTube at the same time, with only occasional blips and pixelation

about 10 hours ago
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TotalEnergies buys €5.1bn stake in Czech tycoon’s power plants business

The Czech billionaire Daniel Křetínský is to become one of the largest shareholders in TotalEnergies after selling a stake in his electricity generation business, which includes several UK power plants, to the French oil company.Křetínský, whose companies own stakes in Royal Mail and West Ham United football club, agreed to sell a 50% stake in his stable of European power plants to TotalEnergies for about €5.1bn (£4.5bn) in exchange for about 4.1% of Total’s share capital

about 13 hours ago
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AI firms must be clear on risks or repeat tobacco’s mistakes, says Anthropic chief

Artificial intelligence companies must be transparent about the risks posed by their products or be in danger of repeating the mistakes of tobacco and opioid firms, according to the chief executive of the AI startup Anthropic.Dario Amodei, who runs the US company behind the Claude chatbot, said he believed AI would become smarter than “most or all humans in most or all ways” and urged his peers to “call it as you see it”.Speaking to CBS News, Amodei said a lack of transparency about the impact of powerful AI would replay the errors of cigarette and opioid firms that failed to raise a red flag over the potential health damage of their own products.“You could end up in the world of, like, the cigarette companies, or the opioid companies, where they knew there were dangers, and they didn’t talk about them, and certainly did not prevent them,” he said.Amodei warned this year that AI could eliminate half of all entry-level white-collar jobs – office roles such as accountancy, law and banking – within five years

about 16 hours ago
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How Google’s DeepMind tool is ‘more quickly’ forecasting hurricane behavior

When then Tropical Storm Melissa was churning south of Haiti, Philippe Papin, a National Hurricane Center (NHC) meteorologist, had confidence it was about to grow into a monster hurricane.As the lead forecaster on duty, he predicted that in just 24 hours the storm would become a category 4 hurricane and begin a turn towards the coast of Jamaica. No NHC forecaster had ever issued such a bold forecast for rapid strengthening.But Papin had an ace up his sleeve: artificial intelligence in the form of Google’s new DeepMind hurricane model – released for the first time in June. And, as predicted, Melissa did become a storm of astonishing strength that tore through Jamaica

1 day ago
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England sweating over fitness of Ollie Lawrence for Argentina match

England are sweating on the fitness of Ollie Lawrence before their final autumn clash with Argentina this weekend.Lawrence starred on Saturday in the statement victory against the All Blacks but limped off in the closing stages and could be forced to sit out the match against the Pumas on Sunday. The 26-year-old centre will be assessed when England reconvene on Tuesday after an extra day off but if Lawrence is ruled out it would be a blow for Steve Borthwick.The England head coach may also be without Freddie Steward, who was withdrawn midway through the first half against New Zealand with a head injury, as he prepares for England’s pursuit of an 11th successive victory and a clean sweep of their autumn fixtures.Lawrence was in fine form against the All Blacks, scoring England’s opening try before teeing up centre partner Fraser Dingwall in the second half

about 9 hours ago
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Sean Bowen, jump jockey great who can’t buy a winner at the Cheltenham festival

Mike Trout is 34 years old, weighs 235lb and plays baseball for the Los Angeles Angels. Sean Bowen is 28, tips the scales at around 140lb and is the reigning champion jockey over jumps. At first sight, they do not have a great deal in common besides both being professional athletes (and even then, Trout earns more in a fortnight than Bowen can ever hope to bank in a year).But when you break down what they do and, above all, when they do it, there are some distinct similarities.Trout is widely recognised as the greatest baseball player of his generation, consistently putting up numbers during the six-month, 162-game regular that put him among the all-time greats

about 11 hours ago
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Father of teen whose death was linked to social media has ‘lost faith’ in Ofcom

3 days ago
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Personal details of Tate galleries job applicants leaked online

3 days ago
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AI firm claims it stopped Chinese state-sponsored cyber-attack campaign

3 days ago
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People in the UK: have you received good or bad financial advice from an AI chatbot?

4 days ago
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AI slop tops Billboard and Spotify charts as synthetic music spreads

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UK firms can win a significant chunk of the AI chip market | John Browne

4 days ago