Tag Archives: sleeper

The Sleeper Has Awakened: Six Key Takeaways From the Rollout of North Korea’s “Tactical Nuclear Attack Submarine” – 38 North

  1. The Sleeper Has Awakened: Six Key Takeaways From the Rollout of North Korea’s “Tactical Nuclear Attack Submarine” 38 North
  2. North Korea’s bodged nuclear-missile submarine will be very dangerous – to its crew The Telegraph
  3. Photos show Kim Jong Un celebrating a new ‘nuclear attack submarine’ Business Insider
  4. PHOTOS: North Korean Submarine Launch National Review
  5. Photos show Kim Jong Un celebrating the launch of North Korea’s new ‘nuclear attack’ submarine wearing a dapper cream suit, a sun hat, and really a big smile Yahoo News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Fantasy Football: Sleeper running backs for 2023 | Fantasy Football News, Rankings and Projections – Pro Football Focus

  1. Fantasy Football: Sleeper running backs for 2023 | Fantasy Football News, Rankings and Projections Pro Football Focus
  2. 2023 Fantasy Football: Who could be the biggest surprise players of the season? Yahoo Sports
  3. 8 Overpriced Players to Avoid on Yahoo! Drafts (2023 Fantasy Football) FantasyPros
  4. Fantasy Football 2023 Staff Bold Predictions: Tua Tagovailoa tops 5,000 yards, Kyle Pitts is TE1 and more CBS Sports
  5. Fantasy Football: 5 running backs to fade at their current ADP in 2023 | Fantasy Football News, Rankings and Projections Pro Football Focus
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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‘The Last Kingdom’ Oral History: Alexander Dreymon, Mark Rowley and More Break Down How the Epic Netflix Series Became a Sleeper Hit – Variety

  1. ‘The Last Kingdom’ Oral History: Alexander Dreymon, Mark Rowley and More Break Down How the Epic Netflix Series Became a Sleeper Hit Variety
  2. The Last Kingdom: Seven Kings Must Die: Why is the show receiving backlash? Here’s what we know PINKVILLA
  3. The 7 Kings In The Last Kingdom Movie Explained: Show History & True Story Screen Rant
  4. The Last Kingdom Seven Kings Must Die: Is Uhtred Based on a Real Life Person? Where is Bebbanburg Castle Located? Leisure Byte
  5. The Last Kingdom: Seven Kings Must Die review Lyles Movie Files
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Recalled Fisher-Price sleeper now linked to roughly 100 deaths, CPSC says

The Consumer Product Safety Commission and Fisher-Price “reannounced” a recall of Rock ‘n Play Sleepers on Monday, saying that eight fatalities have occurred after the initial recall announcement nearly three years ago. 

About 4.7 million of the sleepers were sold before the recall was announced in April 2019, with the CPSC saying at the time that 30 infant fatalities were linked to the product. 

Since then, about 70 additional fatalities have been reported, including eight that occurred after the first recall announcement, according to the CPSC. 

“Infant fatalities have occurred in the Rock ‘n Play Sleepers, after the infants rolled from their back to their stomach or side while unrestrained, or under other circumstances,” the CPSC said in the recall announcement. 

Fisher-Prices’s Rock ‘n Play Sleepers have been linked to approximately 100 deaths, according to the Consumer Product Safety Commission.  (John McDonnell/The Washington Post via Getty Images / Getty Images)

Fisher-Price did not respond to a request for comment on Monday. 

The company said at the time of the original recall that it continues to “stand by the safety of all of our products,” but issued the recall “given the reported incidents in which the product was used contrary to safety warnings and instructions.” 

COMPANY RECALLING BLOOD PRESSURE PILLS BECAUSE OF POTENTIAL IMPURITY PRESENCE

Separately, the recall for Kids2 Rocking Sleepers was also reannounced on Monday, with the CPSC saying that 15 deaths have been linked to the product, including four since the initial recall. 

A recall of Kids2 Rocking Sleepers was ‘reannounced’ on Monday.  (Consumer Product Safety Commission  / Fox News)

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ON FOX BUSINESS 

“We are issuing this announcement because, despite their removal from the marketplace and a prohibition on their sale, babies continue to die in these products,” CPSC Chair Alexander Hoehn-Saric said in a statement. 

“I urge all parents, grandparents, and caregivers to follow the guidance of this announcement and stop using these products immediately.”

A spokesperson or Kids2 did not respond to a request for comment on Monday. 

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Fantasy Football Week 8 Start ‘Em & Sit ‘Em Wide Receivers: Play D.J. Moore, Adam Thielen is a sleeper, more

USATSI

Byes subtract just two teams from the Week 8 slate but that means we’ll lose JuJu Smith-Schuster on his recent hot streak, Mike Williams (who is injured anyway) and Keenan Allen among others.

It is our objective to help you find wide receivers you’ll want to move in and out of your lineups based on matchups every week. Playing matchups is key, and we’re here to find you the perfect path to a winning in 2022.   

START ‘EM & SIT ‘EM

Wide Receivers

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2022 Fantasy Football draft prep: One deep sleeper to target from all 32 NFL teams

There are few things more satisfying than watching everyone run to the waiver wire early in the season only to find that the guy they expected was available is already on your roster. Fantasy managers who drafted James Robinson or Elijah Mitchell the past two years know exactly what I’m talking about. 

My hope is that there are a couple of Week 1 surprises on the list below, but that’s not all you’ll find. You’ll find at least one player who I expect to start the year on the PUP list, but could be a league-winner in the second half. You’ll find multiple running back handcuffs, a few late-round tight ends, and even one or two quarterbacks.

So what does this hodgepodge of players have in common? Well, they all have a consensus ADP on Fantasy Pros outside the top 180 and they’re all being drafted after the first 10 rounds at CBS as of August 25th. I’ve sorted them by division with a few words on my favorites in each division. 

I expect a few objections that a couple of these guys are too well known, so I’ll update in September for the final draft weekend if ADP changes that much. 

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The NFC North has a big advantage over everyone else in this regard. While Herbert is my favorite of the group and Doubs has been the talk of training camp, Jameson Williams is actually one of my favorite late-round picks, as long as you have an IR slot in your league.

Even in industry drafts, Williams often makes it to the final round because he’s already been placed on the PUP list and will miss at least the first four weeks of the season. My expectation is that Williams will return after the team’s Week 7 bye and I’m perfectly fine with drafting him, stashing him, and then having an open roster slot for that first run of waivers. 

With perfect help, Williams could have been the WR1 in this class and if he is back to 100% he may just be the No. 1 wide receiver in this class for the 2022 Fantasy playoffs. Williams ran a 4.30 40-yard dash at the combine and produced more than 1,500 yards as a 20-year-old at Alabama. He’s an incredible talent who only needs to get healthy and learn the system. 

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Dontrell Hilliard isn’t my favorite, but he does appear to be the handcuff to Derrick Henry, so if that’s your kind of thing he should be on your radar for the final round. Same goes for Evan Engram, who appears locked in as TE1 in a Doug Pederson offense. 

The guy who is my favorite is Nico Collins. Collins struggled as a rookie, but he’s 6-foot-4 and ran a 4.45 40 at his pro day so I’m willing to give him a pass on that bad rookie year. Collins has virtually no competition for targets behind Brandin Cooks and I expect both an increase in pass volume and pass efficiency in Davis Mills’ second year as a starter. Collins profiles as a borderline flex with Cooks healthy and a potential top-25 wide receiver if something happens to Cooks.

We’re taking Collins as early as Round 10 in our mocks, but his ADP does not reflect that at all. I wouldn’t be surprised if he’s one of the risers of the final two weeks of draft season.

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Isiah Pacheco and Zamir White are a pair of backs I was shocked qualified for this list. Pacheco in particular has been drafted as high as Round 8 in some of our industry drafts. While I think that’s a mistake, it’s also a mistake to let him last past Round 12.

Both of these backs are on teams that we just aren’t sure are sold on their starters. Both of these backs could be goalline backs according to reports we’ve heard during camp. And both of these backs are rookies on teams that could have some fireworks on offense. On the downside, both of these backs are probably going to be sharing with someone if the starter goes down. I slightly prefer White, but I’m fine with either in Round 11.

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While Sterling Shepard did surprise me by coming off the PUP before the year started, and all the other Giants receivers seem to be hurt, he’s not my favorite on this list. At least not until I hear he’s back to 100%. My favorite is Jalen Tolbert and he could have a huge opportunity due to the recovery of another injured receiver, Michael Gallup.

Tolbert was the Cowboys Round 3 pick out of South Alabama, where he thoroughly dominated the lesser competition, averaging 122 receiving yards per game. His 51.2% dominator score ranks in the 97th percentile for receivers entering the NFL and he’s drawn good reviews in Dallas this offseason. 

it’s always tricky to evaluate small-school guys like Tolbert and the fact that he’s already 23 makes him even more suspicious but that maturity combined with this opportunity could equal a very fast start. if Gallup isn’t able to get back to 100% early in the year, Tolbert could get an extended run as the WR2 in an offense that we expect to be well above average, if not explosive. 

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As you may be able to tell, the quality is beginning to drop off at this point, especially once we get past my favorite in each division. Although, I will say I think there’s an underrated chance that the four NFC South players above all have an impact this year. Mariota runs enough to be a borderline startable QB in a one-quarterback league, Robbie Anderson is likely the No. 2 wide receiver on the Panthers, and Kyle Rudolph could have the Gronk role. But I don’t like any of them as much as I like Mark Ingram. 

Ingram played two games without Kamara last year and averaged 20 touches, 110.5 yards, and 19.1 PPR Fantasy points per game. That makes Ingram one of the most attractive handcuffs and he’s not being drafted as such at all. I also think there’s a chance he’s like a poor man’s Kareem Hunt without a Kamara injury, especially if the Saints stay as run heavy as they were last year. I actually have Ingram projected in Hunt’s range, but I rank him much lower because you don’t have to draft him near that high.

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Eno Benjamin is a nice handcuff and Geno Smith could be a sneaky QB2 in leagues where you can start more than one, but Tyler Higbee is the star of the NFC West deep sleepers and I’m not really sure why he qualifies.

Last year Higbee finished the year as TE14 overall and outscored Mike Gesicki, Hunter Henry and Pat Freiermuth on a per-game basis. He was even better in his final four games, averaging 13.8 Fantasy points per game. Now we’ve seen a big finish from Higbee that didn’t translate the following year, but I think this is different.

For one thing, Higbee got the target share last year, his efficiency just fell off a cliff, and I don’t think there’s any reason to believe he’ll continue to be less efficient with Matthew Stafford than he was with jared Goff. He has 100-target upside in an offense that we think may be the best in football and the top two target earners on the team are both 29-year-old receivers with extensive injury histories. He’s one injury away from being the second target on the offense, and a potential league-winner at that. Even without an injury I project Higbee to be a top-12 tight end and he’s rarely drafted in our drafts.

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Yeah, it’s getting worse. Isaiah McKenzie is right behind Corey Davis here, but both are wide receivers that probably need some help to be actual difference makers in Fantasy. For Davis, it may be as simple as holding off Garrett Wilson, which none of us really want. For McKenzie, he just needs to preserve the Cole Beasley role and be more efficient.

Beasley averaged seven targets per game over the past three seasons. McKenzie could earn those targets, but it will mean that Gabriel Davis and/or Dawson Knox don’t take the step forward that they’re being drafted to take. Considering I don’t have Davis or Knox ranked as high as consensus, that seems possible. 

The other advantage McKenzie could have over Beasley is in the running game. He has 19 carries for 56 yards and a touchdown over the past two seasons and ran 10 times for 66 yards and two scores in 2018. If McKenzie could add a point per game on the ground, there’s more upside. 

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Here we are again with Mike Davis. Gus Edwards has already been placed on the PUP list. J.K. Dobbins still isn’t fully cleared. Mike Davis may very well be your Week 1 starter against the New York Jets. 

I know you feel like you’ve been fooled by Davis before but I need to remind you that Latavius Murray scored four touchdowns in the first six games of 2021 for Baltimore and Devonta Freeman averaged 14.2 PPR Fantasy points per game from Week 9-14. If those guys can be Fantasy relevant in this offense, just about anyone could. 

Davis won’t likely have a big role for long, but if you can find a Week 1 starter in the double-digit rounds, you should hop on it, especially if you went with a Zero-RB approach.

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Passenger spent the night on a sleeper train and woke up to realize it never left the station

The Caledonian Sleeper operates overnight services between London and Scotland.Jane Barlow/PA/Getty Images

  • A passenger woke up on a sleeper train from Glasgow to London to find it never left the station.

  • Jim Metcalfe tweeted that he was woken at 5:30am by a friendly employee who said they hadn’t moved.

  • Trains across the UK were hit by cancellations as temperatures exceeding 100°F affected rail lines.

A passenger spent the night on a sleeper train and woke up hours later to find it had never left the station.

Jim Metcalfe tweeted that he boarded the Caledonian Sleeper in Glasgow, Scotland on Wednesday night, and had expected to wake up the next morning in London.

To his amazement, he said he woke up at 5:30am to realise he was still in Glasgow because the train had never left the station.

“In 15 years of using this train, and through many bizarre twists and turns, this has to be strangest yet,” Metcalfe tweeted. “Wake up, and the train never left Glasgow. It was just sat here all night, and now we have been thrown off it at 5.30am in the wrong city.”

Metcalfe, a charity executive who was travelling for work, added: “Cal Sleeper tweeted that the service was on last night, let people board, and just left us sitting here all night. They let everyone get in and go to sleep, and just left us here.”

He told the BBC he was woken by a friendly employee with a sausage roll, and went home shortly after.

The Caledonian Sleeper, run by Serco Transport, is an overnight train service that runs to and from London to destinations in Scotland with berths costing up to £405 ($486) one way.

Kathryn Darbandi, Serco’s managing director for the Caledonian Sleeper, apologised to passengers in a statement to The Guardian and said the cancelation was caused by a fault identified on the line late in the evening following the extreme heat that struck the UK last week.

“We made all efforts to support guests impacted, including providing overnight accommodation on board and options for travel on alternative rail services the next day. All guests will receive a full refund.”

Serco didn’t immediately respond to Insider’s request for comment.

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Couple road trips in converted hearse nicknamed ‘The Grim Sleeper’

Rather than take a car or an RV, this couple decided to road trip in a converted hearse. 

Shannon Orr, 24, and Iain Cameron, 31, from Warrington, U.K., drove across Scotland’s North Coast 500 in their 1998 Volvo 960 Hearse with their two dogs, Billy and Peanut, according to SWNS. 

The hearse got the couple so much attention on their trip that they nicknamed it “The Grim Sleeper” and even started an Instagram account for it, the news agency reported. 

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Orr told SWNS she and Cameron were originally going to camp through the North Coast 500, but when they came across the advertisement for the hearse online, they changed their mind. 

Shannon Orr, 24, and Iain Cameron, 31, from Warrington, U.K., drove across Scotland’s North Coast 500 in their 1998 Volvo 960 Hearse.
(SWNS)

They saw the converted hearse advertised on Facebook and bought it for $4,826 (£3,500).
(SWNS)

“We saw it on Facebook and had to get it, because it was something neither of us had seen before,” Orr told SWNS. 

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According to SWNS, the couple paid $4,826 (£3,500) for the already-converted hearse.

“We didn’t do any of the conversion,” Orr said. “We bought it already converted, so we can’t claim anything for that sadly.”

“I think with it being a hearse, it puts people off due to its previous passengers,” Orr said. “But it just works so well as a camper if you can get past that part.”
(SWNS)

“All we have added up to now is the Halloween figures on the dash, the ducks on the wing mirrors and the skeletons on the front and back,” Orr added.

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She told SWNS that even though it’s a hearse, it drives just like a normal car – though it does stick out of parking spaces.

Orr and Cameron plan to use their hearse for “all our future road trips,” Orr said.
(SWNS)

“I think with it being a hearse, it puts people off due to its previous passengers,” Orr said. “But it just works so well as a camper if you can get past that part.”

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Orr and Cameron plan to use their hearse for “all our future road trips,” Orr said. Though, she added they’re still planning their next destination. 

“I’m sure it’ll attract a lot of attention where ever we go,” Orr said. 



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Sophisticated hackers snuck sleeper malware into nearly 30,000 Macs

There’s a popular stereotype that Apple’s computers are largely immune to malware. Not only is is that incorrect, it appears that sophisticated hacker(s) might have been toying with the idea of a heist or drop nasty enough they’d have needed to cover their tracks. As Ars Technica reports, security researchers at Malwarebytes and Red Canary discovered a mysterious piece of malware hiding on nearly 30,000 Macs, one designed to deliver an as-yet-unknown payload, and with a self-destruction mechanism that might remove any trace that it ever existed. They’re calling it Silver Sparrow.

Red Canary’s own blog post goes into more detail, including how they discovered multiple versions targeting not only Intel, but also newer Macs based on Apple’s own M1 chip — which is quite the thing, given how new Apple’s M1 computers are and how few vulnerabilities have been discovered yet. It was literally just one week ago that Objective-See security researcher Patrick Wardle published a story about the first piece of malware discovered in the wild targeting Apple Silicon, and now we have two.

Thankfully, Silver Sparrow was not able to cover its tracks before being outed, there’s no indication it was used to do any damage, and Red Canary writes that Apple has already revoked the binaries (which should theoretically keep you from accidentally installing it yourself). But the idea damage could have been done isn’t theoretical: they actually found these strains of malware on Macs in the wild.

Researchers warn that Apple’s transition from Intel to its own silicon may make it easy for other bad actors to slip malware through the cracks, too: you can read quotes from several of them in this Wired story.



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