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Saigon Garden Riverside Villa, District 9 ,HCMC - Lans for sale from 21 mil VND/m2 - 0909235242

Extreme joyful lifestyle at Saigon Garden Riverside Village Escape from the busy city life and back to nature - SAIGON GARDEN VILLA IN DISTRICT 9 Call for booking: 0909235242 ---------------------------------------------- Location: Long Thuan street, Long Phuoc Ward, District 9,...




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Saigon Garden Riverside Villa, District 9 ,HCMC - Lans for sale from 21 mil VND/m2 - 0973.545.319

Extreme joyful lifestyle at Saigon Garden Riverside Village Escape from the busy city life and back to nature - SAIGON GARDEN VILLA IN DISTRICT 9 Call for booking: 0973.545.319 ---------------------------------------------- Location: Long Thuan street, Long Phuoc Ward, District 9...




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Saigon Garden Riverside Villa, District 9 ,HCMC - Lans for sale from 21 mil VND/m2 - 0973.545.319

Extreme joyful lifestyle at Saigon Garden Riverside Village Escape from the busy city life and back to nature - SAIGON GARDEN VILLA IN DISTRICT 9 Call for booking: 0973.545.319 ---------------------------------------------- Location: Long Thuan street, Long Phuoc Ward, District 9...




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Saigon Garden Riverside Villas, District 9, HCMC - Lands for sale from 21-29 mil VND/m2, 0938541596

Extreme joyful lifestyle at Saigon Garden Riverside Village Escape from the busy city life and back to nature - SAIGON GARDEN VILLA IN DISTRICT 9 Call for booking: +84938541596 Ms.Bao Qui Email: qui.nb92@gmail.com ---------------------------------------------- Location: Long Thua...




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River-nearby Villa land lot, only from 12 million VND/sqm, red book,100% of residence

River-nearby Villa land lot, only from 12 million VND/m2, red book, 100% of residence, golf yard of 36 holes BIEN HOA NEWCITY Settlement career - Short-term investments have high profits. Red book of each lot, completed infrastructure, utility Resort. The Golf course has 36 holes...




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GARDEN VILLAS OF DISTRICT 9 SAIGON GARDEN, PRICE ONLY FROM 21 million VND/M2, DISCOUNT UP TO 18

-Location: Long Phuoc ward, district 9, Ho Chi Minh city. -Construction unit: Hung Thinh Icons. -Type: Garden villa. -Area: From 1.000 m2/lot. -Utilities: Landscape channel, tennis court Children's playground, marina, clubhouse, green park, etc. -Project legal: Long-term ownershi...




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GARDEN VILLAS IN SAIGON GARDEN RIVERSIDE VILLAGE, PRICE ONLY FROM 21 million VND/M2

Project overview: - Location: Long Phuoc ward, district 9, Ho Chi Minh city. - Investor: Sai Gon Garden Resort Property Joint Stock Company. - Scale: 30 ha. - Total lots: 168 lots. - Area: From 1.000 m2/lot. - Type: Garden villa. - Private pool for each villa. - Project legal: Pi...




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Selling tips from “Queen of Real Estate” Dolly Lenz

With her aggressively successful tactics, mega broker Dolly Lenz has sold over $8.5 billion in premium properties to rich and famous customers. Here are some of her valuable secrets for those looking to sell properties.




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How to make your listing stand out from the crowd?

Every home seller wants to sell it fast and reach as many buyers as possible. Here are some tips to make your listing stand out to potential buyers from the crowd.




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9 mistakes that prevent your listed home from finding buyers

Every seller wants his homes to be sold smoothly and quickly with the highest possible price. However, there are still houses which have been listed on the market for months without any potential buyer because the sellers make one, or maybe more, of the following popular mistakes:




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Saigon Garden Riverside Village - The home of emotions. From 21 million/sqm. Hotline 0938169445

Saigon Garden Riverside Villas - From 21-28 Million/sqm. Hotline 0938169445 - Location: Long Phuoc Ward, District 9 - Ho Chi Minh City. - Project name: Saigon Garden Riverside Village - Location: Cau Dinh Street, Long Phuoc Ward, District 9, HCM city. - Scale: 30 hectares - Numbe...




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Saigon Garden Riverside Village - Land for sale by Hung Thinh Co. - From 21 billion for 1000sqm

Saigon Garden Riverside Village - Land for sale by Hung Thinh Corporation. Only 21 bil For 1000sqm- Name of Project: Saigon Garden Riverside Village - Location: Long Phuoc Ward, District 9, HCM City - Scale: 30 ha (the most prestigious Compound model in the area). - Quantity: Onl...




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Saigon Garden Riverside Villa - District 9 - HCMC - Only from 21mil VND/m2 - 0909235242

Extreme joyful lifestyle at Saigon Garden Riverside Village Escape from the busy city life and back to nature - SAIGON GARDEN VILLA IN DISTRICT 9 Call for booking: 0909235242 ---------------------------------------------- Location: Long Thuan street, Long Phuoc Ward, Distric...




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Saigon Garden Riverside Villas, District 9, HCMC - Lands for sale from 21-29 mil VND/m2, 0938541596

Extreme joyful lifestyle at Saigon Garden Riverside Village Escape from the busy city life and back to nature - SAIGON GARDEN VILLA IN DISTRICT 9 Call for booking: +84938541596 Ms.Bao Qui Email: qui.nb92@gmail.com ---------------------------------------------- Location: Long Thua...




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GARDEN VILLAS IN SAIGON GARDEN RIVERSIDE VILLAGE, PRICE ONLY FROM 21 MILLION VND/M2, IDEAL RESI

Project overview: -Location: Long Phuoc ward, district 9, Ho Chi Minh city. -Investor: Sai Gon Garden Resort Property Joint Stock Company. -Scale: 30 ha. -Total lots: 168 lots. -Area: From 1.000 m2/lot. -Type: Garden villa. -Private pool for each villa. -Project legal: Pink book ...





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Ignoring plea from UN, Justin Trudeau refuses to lift sanctions on poor nations during pandemic

These days, any national leader not actively urging their citizens to drink disinfectant is managing to look (relatively) good on the world stage.

Certainly, compared to the neurotic leadership south of the border, Justin Trudeau has emerged as a steady hand on the tiller, quickly providing Canadians with a wide economic safety net and behaving like an adult in the crisis.

So it's all the more disappointing that, out of the limelight, he's doing a great deal to make the situation worse during this pandemic for some of the most vulnerable people on the planet.

I'm referring to the prime minister's decision to ignore a plea last month from United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres -- and the Pope -- for nations to lift sanctions against other nations in order to help some of the weakest and poorest countries cope with the coronavirus crisis.

That sounds like a reasonable request, under the circumstances.

Indeed, even if we don't care about the world's vulnerable people, helping them deal with the crisis is in our interests too. As the UN leader noted: "Let us remember that we are only as strong as the weakest health system in our interconnected world."

Yet Canada, ignoring the plea from the UN's highest official, continues in the midst of the pandemic to impose sanctions on 20 nations, including Lebanon, Venezuela, Syria, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Nicaragua and Yemen.

While Canada's sanctions are typically aimed at punishing the regimes running these countries, the impact of the sanctions falls primarily on ordinary citizens, according to Atif Kubursi, professor emeritus of economics at McMaster University.

Kubursi, who also served as a UN under-secretary-general and has extensive UN experience in the Middle East and Asia, says the impact of Canada's sanctions on the people in these countries is devastating.

While the sanctions often appear to be directed exclusively at military items, they frequently end up being applied to virtually all goods -- including spare parts needed to operate machinery in hospitals and pharmaceutical companies, notes Kubursi, who signed a letter from prominent Canadians to Trudeau requesting the lifting of sanctions.

For instance, if a Syrian businessman wants to buy Canadian products, he has to open an account for the transaction. But Kubursi says the Canadian government instructs Canadian banks not to allow such accounts for the purposes of trade with Syria -- no matter how benign the Canadian product may be, or how urgently it might be needed in Syria.

For that matter, Ottawa's sanctions prevent Canadians from using our banks or financial services to transfer money to Syria -- for instance, to family members living in Syria.

The impact of sanctions, while always painful, is particularly deadly during the pandemic, when even advanced nations have struggled to obtain life-saving equipment.

While Canada's sanctions mostly date back to the Harper era or earlier, the Trudeau government has generally maintained them and even added new ones against Venezuela.

Ottawa's sanctions appear primarily aimed at appeasing the U.S., which ruthlessly enforces sanctions against regimes it wishes to destabilize or overthrow. Washington also punishes countries and companies that don't co-operate with its sanctions.

Ottawa's willingness to fall in line behind Washington is reflected in the fact it doesn't impose sanctions against U.S allies Saudi Arabia or Israel, despite Saudi Arabia's brutal murder of dissident Jamal Khashoggi and Israel's illegal occupation of the West Bank. Even Israel's announcement that it plans to annex the West Bank in July has produced no sanctions or criticism from Canada.

Trudeau's decision to continue sanctioning 20 nations seems quite out of sync with the spirit of the times, when it's hard to find a TV commercial that doesn't proclaim the sentiment that "we're all in this together."

That spirit of international togetherness has been amply demonstrated by Cuba, which sent Cuban doctors to Italy to help its overwhelmed health care system and has offered similar medical help to First Nations in Canada.

When 36 Cuban doctors arrived in Milan last month, a grateful Italy thanked them and Italians at the airport cheered.

Meanwhile, Canada, in the spirit of the international togetherness, rebuffs Cuban doctors, ignores the UN and imposes sanctions on some of the world's poorest nations.

Linda McQuaig is an author and journalist. This column, which appeared in The Toronto Star, is based on research from her new book The Sport & Prey of Capitalists.

Image: CanadianPM/Video Screenshot/Twitter

May 8, 2020




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Footage of Cancelled Prince of Persia: Redemption from 2012 Discovered

A gameplay trailer for a Prince of Persia reboot, called Prince of Persia: Redemption, was posted on YouTube in March 2012 and was discovered this week. 

The LinkedIn profile for the former Ubisoft employee Christophe Prelot revealed he worked on a cancelled Prince of Persia title from April 2010 to 2011 as a 3D level artist. The game was in development for the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 and Windows PC. 

Ubisoft assistant technical director Marc-Andre Belleau in 2018 left a comment on the video asking, "Where did you get that?!"

View the video below:

Thanks ResetEra.

A life-long and avid gamer, William D'Angelo was first introduced to VGChartz in 2007. After years of supporting the site, he was brought on in 2010 as a junior analyst, working his way up to lead analyst in 2012. He has expanded his involvement in the gaming community by producing content on his own YouTube channel and Twitch channel dedicated to gaming Let's Plays and tutorials. You can contact the author at wdangelo@vgchartz.com or on Twitter @TrunksWD.

Full Article - https://www.vgchartz.com/article/443408/footage-of-cancelled-prince-of-persia-redemption-from-2012-discovered/




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Deepfake software translates videos from one language to another

An AI based on deepfake technology can translate videos of a person speaking in one language into another. In future, it could help people who don’t speak the same language communicate




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US military face recognition system could work from 1 kilometre away

The US Special Operations Command is developing a portable face-recognition system designed to identify people 1 kilometre away. It could also be used by law enforcement




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Wind-powered turbines could clean pollutants from our air

A self-powered device that generates electricity from the wind can also absorb and break down harmful nitric oxide and nitrogen dioxide from the air




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AI can pick out specific odours from a combination of smells

An AI can detect the presence of smells and even distinguish between scents like ammonia or carbon monoxide, which could be useful for detecting hazardous odours




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Artificial leaves made from aluminium could keep windows frost-free

In winter, the veins of leaves don’t get completely covered in frost. Mimicking this effect could be the best way to create ice-resistant surfaces




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Microrobots made from pollen help remove toxic mercury from wastewater

Pollen has a natural tendency to adsorb mercury and forms the basis of a new class of tiny robots that speed through toxic water to purify it




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Software recreates a 3D model of your face from a smartphone video

A program that combines artificial intelligence and geometrical modelling can create an accurate 3D model of your face from a single 20-second video




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It's time to retreat from the tyranny of lockdown tech

People in lockdown are no longer trying to use technology to get their old lives back and that's a good thing, says Annalee Newitz




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Zoom Backgrounds Now Include a Selection From TfL - That's Not a Reference to Star Wars

TfL as in Transport for London. Greeeeeaaat.




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Why Temperature Screenings Alone Won't Protect People From Covid-19

While such a plan might sound appealing, it’s likely to provide a false sense of security




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Zens Comes Closest to Delivering the Wireless Charger Apple AirPower Promised to Be

It delivers almost all the functionality Apple promised, with a steep Apple-like price tag to match.




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Shudder's Blood Quantum Is a Classic Zombie Tale Told From a Welcome New Perspective

This film gives us insight into a community that’s already endured plenty even before the zombies arrived.




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One Child Killed, 72 Others Sickened by Coronavirus-Linked Syndrome in New York

The majority of these children have tested positive for the virus or seem to carry antibodies from an earlier infection.




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Alison Roman Bashed Marie Kondo and Chrissy Teigen, and It Did Not Spark Joy

Photo Illustration by Lyne Lucien/The Daily Beast/Getty

Alison Roman’s latest comments about Marie Kondo have not sparked joy.

In an interview with The New Consumer about her increased popularity and the avenues she might pursue to capitalize on it, the popular food columnist discussed her hesitance to put her name on a product line—citing the Japanese organization maven and Chrissy Teigen as examples of what she did not foresee in her own future.

“I have a collaboration coming out with [the cookware startup] Material, a capsule collection,” Roman said. “It’s limited edition, a few tools that I designed that are based on tools that I use that aren’t in production anywhere—vintage spoons and very specific things that are one-offs that I found at antique markets that they have made for me.”

Read more at The Daily Beast.




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Second NY Child Dies From Rare Syndrome Linked to COVID-19

Lucas Jackson/Reuters

A 7-year-old boy from Westchester County is the second child in New York state to die from pediatric multi-symptom inflammatory syndrome tied to COVID-19 since the pandemic began. A 5-year-old boy died earlier in the week from the same syndrome at Mount Sinai Kravis Children’s Hospital in New York City.

The childhood ailment has affected at least 73 children in New York state and authorities are now looking for other potential cases across the country. Cases have also been reported in Washington, D.C., California, Delaware, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Washington state and New Jersey, where a 4-year-old died with symptoms last month.

It has been previously thought that children are less likely to suffer any serious complications from the coronavirus.

Read more at The Daily Beast.




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Best SIM Only Phone Plans From Telcos That Aren't Telstra, Optus Or Vodafone

While considering a new phone plan your first instinct may be to compare the big three - Telstra, Optus, and Vodafone. But over the past few years smaller telcos have come in swinging with plans that have high data allowances and smaller monthly fees. By looking a little deeper you can grab a great bargain. Here are five of our favourite deals these telcos are packing right now. More »
    




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Money saving hacks: How you could save over £650 in a year - from just one penny



MONEY saving hacks are something which many people will look to adopt in their lives, be it for a financial milestone or for a rainy day fund. And, there may be a way in which some soon see their spare cash add up.




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Mysterious radio signal from space seems to have suddenly vanished

Strange blasts from space called fast radio bursts continue to puzzle astronomers with their odd behaviour, as they seem to come from a variety of galaxies




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A Scheme of Heaven reveals what scientists can learn from astrology

Astrology is bunk, but a new book exploring its ancient history argues that it has crucial lessons for today's data science with its seemingly opaque algorithms




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Inside the mission to stop killer asteroids from smashing into Earth

When asteroid Armageddon is upon us, we can't just call Bruce Willis. Meet the people who really do watch the skies – and make detailed plans for our survival




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We’ve finally spotted a pattern in mysterious radio blasts from space

Strange, powerful blasts of radio waves from space called fast radio bursts sometimes flash repeatedly, but never with any discernible pattern – until now




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An exoplanet is generating radio waves from its red dwarf sun

For the first time, astronomers have spotted an exoplanet by detecting radio waves generated by interactions with its parent star




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A wobbling star may explain pattern of weird radio signals from space

We’ve spotted strange blasts of radio waves from space in a pattern that may be produced by a magnetised neutron star wobbling as it spins




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A planet could have been stolen from the solar system as it formed

Stars like our sun formed in a dense cluster with thousands of others, during which time they may have swapped planets




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Five things we have learned about Mars from NASA's InSight mission

NASA’s InSight lander has been on the surface of Mars for over a year now – here are five of its strangest and most fascinating discoveries from the Red Planet




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Black hole from the early universe is blasting us with a powerful jet

A huge black hole from when the universe was less than a billion years old is shooting a powerful jet at Earth, and studying it could help us understand the young cosmos




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Tiny meteorite found in Antarctica came from an unknown asteroid

A tiny meteorite found in Antarctica doesn’t match any asteroid or comet we know of. Instead, it must have come from a mystery parent body that’s full of water




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Interstellar comet Borisov came from a cold and distant home star

The interstellar comet Borisov, which flew past Earth in December, is full of carbon monoxide ice that implies its home star is smaller and colder than our sun




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How Joe Biden Can Defeat Trump From His Basement

If he can win the battle for our screens, he can benefit from the death of the traditional presidential campaign.




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NY Has Mismanaged COVID-19 From Top to Bottom

There is something deeply unsettling about the lionization of Andrew Cuomo and his handling of the epidemic, especially in the light of the raw statistics




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AI Chemist Finds the Best Recipe and Stirs Up Molecules From Scratch

A new automated lab bench combs through known chemical reactions to figure out how best to synthesize compounds




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Blue Ocean Robotics Acquires Beam Telepresence Robot From Suitable Technologies

Beam now belongs to a Danish robot venture factory