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Wallabies fans are entitled to be frustrated but it’s not all grim for this tired, talented side

about 13 hours ago
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At the end of a frenetic first half, where Angus Bell ran in one of the great tries by a Wallaby prop, where Matt Faessler powered over for a brace, where Louis Bielle-Biarrey scored a solo stunner and Thomas Ramos and Nicolas Depoortère dotted down as well, Tane Edmed gathered a pass at first receiver.The young fly-half, playing in his seventh Test, was having a decent game.He’d slotted two of his three shots at goal.He was brave to the line, carrying with zip, stitching moves together as he tried to spark a backline short on fluency.But with the clock in the red, he attempted a raking kick to the corner.

Either he didn’t realise the 40 minutes had elapsed, or he thought he was in his own half and a 50-22 was on,Either way, after watching the ball skid into touch to end the half, he stood still, hands on head, stunned by his own misread,Does this sum up Australia’s European tour? It’s tempting to tug at that thread,A young playmaker, full of intent and enterprise, doing almost everything right before making the sort of mistake that spoils the picture,A team brimming with effort but undermined by moments that expose the rickety scaffolding still holding them together.

This is not to pin a disappointing autumn on a young 10 still finding his feet,A great deal conspired against Joe Schmidt’s side as they ran out of puff after an exhausting 2025 in which they played more Tests than any other nation,Fifteen matches in 140 days – a game every nine – would stretch even the deepest squads,For Australia, with their reliance on a handful of frontline players, their inconsistent access to overseas talent and the unrelenting pull of rival codes back home, it was brutal,Fatigue shows up in more than soft shoulders.

It worms its way into decisions, into the micro-moments where Test matches tilt,It’s no accident that the Wallabies were often at their most brittle in the final 10 minutes of each half, when concentration thins and systems wobble,That is not to excuse them,This is still the team that beat South Africa in Johannesburg and exceeded all expectations against the British and Irish Lions,But reality must be acknowledged: they were always up against it this November.

There’ll be inquisitions, rightly, into the collapses against England and Ireland, the shock defeat to Italy, the vulnerability under the high ball, and the lack of punch off the bench,Loyal fans are entitled to be frustrated,Still, it wasn’t all grim,Even in defeat – this 48-33 loss being their fourth from four games – there were moments that cut through the gloom and hinted at a brighter trajectory,Max Jorgensen’s try against France was one such moment.

Taking the ball tight to the left tramline, he straightened, skipped past the first defender and accelerated into the clear as if switching into another frame rate.The grubber ahead was bold, the regather audacious.It reminded everyone that Australia still produces footballers who see space like artists see colour.It also highlighted the contrast with Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii, whose gifts remain frustratingly bottled.The Wallabies know what he can be – a towering threat in contact and a weapon in the air – but they’ve yet to find a way to involve him consistently.

Too often he’s stranded, chasing scraps, reduced to straightening the line rather than bending it,Unlocking him is central to Australia’s evolution,That, inevitably, loops back to the fly-half conundrum,With Noah Lolesio cruelly sidelined, the Wallabies’ options remain unsettled,Edmed isn’t ready.

Carter Gordon hasn’t turned potential into authority.James O’Connor should not re-enter the equation.The jersey feels like a revolving door when what Australia needs is a fixed point.One player who would steady things is Len Ikitau.He is the Wallabies’ metronome, the defensive organiser, the line-straightener, the calm centre of a backline that often feels too chaotic.

When he plays, everything looks connected.When he’s absent, the cohesion evaporates.He is, in many ways, the true linchpin of the backline rebuild.Sign up to Australia SportGet a daily roundup of the latest sports news, features and comment from our Australian sports deskafter newsletter promotionUp front, the picture is clearer after this tour.Will Skelton and Rob Valetini remain the pillars of the pack, and when both are fit, Australia carry genuine heft.

The front row also looks more secure and the set-piece competes in patches.These are work-ons, not reasons to tear up the playbook.So, what does this tour really say? That the Wallabies are incomplete, inconsistent, and still far from the polished product Schmidt and his successor, Les Kiss, wants.But also that they’re not lost.There were enough sparks, enough signs of shape and intent, to suggest this is a team at the beginning of something, not the end.

They leave Europe bruised, exposed and wiser.They also leave it knackered.With a home World Cup in 2027 looming, they don’t need perfection.They just need momentum and a clearer sense of who they are becoming.Right now, the thing they need most of all is a holiday.

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Xania Monet’s music is the stuff of nightmares. Thankfully her AI ‘clankers’ will be limited to this cultural moment | Van Badham

Xania Monet is the latest digital nightmare to emerge from a hellscape of AI content production. No wonder she’s popular … but how long will it last?The music iteration of AI “actor” Tilly Norwood, Xania is a composite product manufactured of digital tools: in this case, a photorealistic avatar accompanied by a sound that computers have generated to resemble that of a human voice singing words.Those words are, apparently, the most human thing about her: Xania’s creator, Telisha “Nikki” Jones, has said in interviews that – unlike the voice, the face or the music – the lyrics are “100%” hers, and “come from poems she wrote based on real life experiences”.Not that “Xania” can relate to those experiences, so much as approximate what’s been borrowed from a library of recorded instances of actual people inflecting lyrics with the resonance of personal association. Some notes may sound like Christina Aguilera, some sound like Beyoncé, but – unlike any of her influences – Xania “herself” is never going to mourn, fear, risk anything for the cause of justice, make a difficult second album, explore her sexuality, confront the reality of ageing, wank, eat a cupcake or die

3 days ago
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French authorities investigate alleged Holocaust denial posts on Elon Musk’s Grok AI

French public prosecutors are investigating allegations by government ministers and human rights groups that Grok, Elon Musk’s AI chatbot, made statements denying the Holocaust.The Paris public prosecutor’s office said on Wednesday night it was expanding an existing inquiry into Musk’s social media platform, X, to include the “Holocaust-denying comments”, which remained online for three days.Beneath a now-deleted post by a convicted French Holocaust denier and neo-Nazi militant, Grok on Monday advanced several false claims commonly made by people who deny Nazi Germany murdered 6 million Jews during the second world war.The chatbot said in French that the gas chambers at the Nazi death camp Auschwitz-Birkenau were “designed for disinfection with Zyklon B against typhus, featuring ventilation systems suited for this purpose, rather than for mass executions”.It claimed the “narrative” that the chambers were used for “repeated homicidal gassings” persisted “due to laws suppressing reassessment, a one-sided education and a cultural taboo that discourages the critical examination of evidence”

3 days ago
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‘We excel at every phase of AI’: Nvidia CEO quells Wall Street fears of AI bubble amid market selloff

Global share markets rose after Nvidia posted third-quarter earnings that beat Wall Street estimates, assuaging for now concerns about whether the high-flying valuations of AI firms had peaked.On Wednesday, all eyes were on Nvidia, the bellwether for the AI industry and the most valuable publicly traded company in the world, with analysts and investors hoping the chipmaker’s third-quarter earnings would dampen fears that a bubble was forming in the sector.Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of Nvidia, opened the earnings call with an attempt to dispel those concerns, saying that there was a major transformation happening in AI, and Nvidia was foundational to that transformation.“There’s been a lot of talk about an AI bubble,” said Huang. “From our vantage point, we see something very different

3 days ago
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Nvidia earnings: Wall Street sighs with relief after AI wave doesn’t crash

Markets expectations around Wednesday’s quarterly earnings report by the most valuable publicly traded company in the world had risen to a fever pitch. Anxiety over billions in investment in artificial intelligence pervaded, in part because the US has been starved of reliable economic data by the recent government shutdown.Investors hoped that both questions would be in part answered by Nvidia’s earnings and by a jobs report due on Thursday morning.“This is a ‘So goes Nvidia, so goes the market’ kind of report,” Scott Martin, chief investment officer at Kingsview Wealth Management, told Bloomberg in a concise summary of market sentiment.The prospect of a market mood swing had built in advance of the earnings call, with options markets anticipating Nvidia’s shares could move 6%, or $280bn in value, up or down

4 days ago
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Uber hit with legal demands to halt use of AI-driven pay systems

Uber has been hit with legal demands to stop using its artificial intelligence driven pay systems, which have been blamed for significantly reducing the incomes of the ride hailing app’s drivers.A letter before action – sent to the US company by the non-profit foundation, Worker Info Exchange (WIE), on Wednesday – is understood to allege that the ride hailing app has breached European data protection law by varying driver pay rates through its controversial algorithm.James Farrar, the director of WIE, said: “Uber has leveraged artificial intelligence and machine learning to implement deeply intrusive and exploitative pay-setting systems that have damaged the livelihoods of thousands of drivers.“Through this collective action, we intend to get a fairer deal for drivers and ensure Uber is held financially accountable for the harm caused by this unlawful use of AI.“This case is … about securing transparent, fair and safe working conditions for all platform workers

4 days ago
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Facebook and Instagram to start kicking Australian teenagers off platforms as social media ban looms

Australian Facebook and Instagram users under 16 will be notified starting Thursday that their accounts will be deactivated by 10 December, as Meta begins to comply with the Albanese government’s social media ban.Users affected by the ban will receive 14 days’ notice of their pending account deactivation through a combination of in-app messages, email and SMS before their access is cut off.The ban will affect users on Facebook and Instagram, as well as Threads, as an Instagram account is required to use that platform. Messenger is excluded from the ban – but Meta has had to develop a way for users to keep access to Messenger without a Facebook account as a result of the ban.Meta will begin stopping access to existing accounts and blocking under-16s from registering new accounts from 4 December, with access removed for all affected accounts by 10 December, the company said

4 days ago
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Wallabies fans are entitled to be frustrated but it’s not all grim for this tired, talented side

about 13 hours ago
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‘He’s the real thing’: Longley feels Chicago connection as Josh Giddey brings Bulls back to the big time | Jack Snape

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Tom Rogers makes hat-trick history in vain as New Zealand surge past Wales

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