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Opinion

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The Windows 11 Start menu is now essentially just an app drawer.

Predictably, the Windows 11 interface is both better and worse

Windows’ first big overhaul in many years is full of refinements, but it also pushes you towards multitasking modes and Microsoft services you might not like.

  • by Tim Biggs

Latest

They say that dogs, especially gifted ones, have a vocabulary equal to that of a one-year-old human.
Opinion
City life

Why deciphering ‘dog’ is much easier than baby talk

While I’m forced to navigate the complex territory of dog/human communication, my new nine-month-old human friend just cruises along, observes Clancy Glover.

  • by Richard Glover
A combined assault on the social media giants: Scott Morrison and Barnaby Joyce.

The ‘net’ in net zero emissions offers a huge temptation to cheat

We won’t get to zero emissions without the ‘net’, but that’s hard and presents us with a great temptation to turn the whole exercise into a rort.

  • by Ross Gittins
There are no easy solutions to disease control.

Beware the promise of easy answers when it comes to COVID

For epidemiologists advising politicians and debating control measures in the public arena: excess haste, over-simplification and exaggeration will lead us into dangerous waters.

  • by Ewan Cameron
Abuse and threats against COVID scientists ... Lisa Jackson Pulver, an epidemiologist and deputy vice-chancellor at the University of Sydney,
Opinion
Harassment

Trolling, abuse, death threats: a COVID scientist’s lot

This week, amid the heat of COVID, my colleagues and I discovered how common it is for us to be harassed and vilified for doing our jobs.

  • by Lisa Jackson Pulver
Illustration: Simon Letch

Sink or swim: why Barnaby Joyce has to accept net zero

Deputy PM Barnaby Joyce has to keep his Nationals party room happy. But he also has to keep the Coalition in government. Otherwise he’s just a rebel with a lost cause.

  • by David Crowe
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NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet has backed green hydrogen to boost the economy and help reduce carbon emissions.
Opinion
Renewables

Blue or green, our future with hydrogen is bright

The former chief scientist argues we need to cut emissions as quickly as possible - and hydrogen from both sources will deliver the result.

  • by Alan Finkel
At the business end of driving down emissions, who’s walking the talk?
Opinion
Renewables

Australian business talks big on climate, but who’s walking the talk?

New research attempts to sort the PR spin and “greenwashing” from the businesses that are taking concerted action to drive down emissions.

  • by Andrew Charlton
brandy
Analysis
Tax reform

From brandy to housing ... tax reform beholden to vested interests

One person’s tax loophole is another’s tax reform. The battle for any substantial change will never be easy in the face of so many vested interests.

  • by Shane Wright
Market Forces says the big four banks’ funding for expansionary fossil fuel projects is incompatible with a commitment to net zero emissions by 2050.
Letters
Letters

Shame on politicians who ignore the climate science

Our democracy is broken. A clear majority of Australians want urgent action on climate change, and it appears most of our parliamentarians also support that. Yet Parliament cannot agree on the net-zero-by-2050 target to which much of the world has committed,

 The selfish office work shirker was bad enough, but in a pandemic they cannot be tolerated.

My colleague avoids work at all costs

Laziness is not the only reason someone might neglect their work.

  • by Jonathan Rivett
In the Herald

In the Herald: October 15, 1996

Dinosaur footprints stolen, police may get extra powers, and Paralympic logo launched

  • by Lyn Maccallum
Victorian primary school teacher Amy Robertson shares advice on starting a teaching career.

‘It was always clear to me that teaching was what I wanted to do’

Having just secured her first full-time teaching role at a primary school, Amy Robertson offers advice to young Victorians who are thinking about a career in teaching.

  • by Amy Robertson
Column 8 Granny dinkus with mask.
Opinion
Column 8

Rack ’em up and get cracking

Degrees of messiness as sport contenders line up.

The WBBL, unlike its men’s equivalent, is a world-leading tournament.

Why the WBBL is better than the BBL

Comparisons really should be made between the WBBL and the BBL: they reveal how the women’s tournament is superior

  • by Daniel Brettig
Building inspectors tour the apartment complex on Charles St Canterbury, where structural concerns have emerged this week.

Building defects in strata units: unstoppable force meets immovable object

Accountability to owners is sorely missing from the system.

  • by Stephen Goddard
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Jobs, trade to benefit if Australia acts on wealth of clean energy resources

Without collective action we will miss out on a stampede of investment into new technologies.

  • by Michele O'Neil and Jennifer Westacott
Home Alone is set to recieve the reboot treatment with ‘Home Sweet Home Alone’
Opinion
Streaming

The Home Alone reboot has me rooting for the robbers

Why can’t they just leave Home Alone, alone?

  • by Thomas Mitchell
Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce has added $100 million to a $200 million regional grants program.

Morrison must not outsource climate policy to the Nationals

The Prime Minister has a duty to take back control of the climate change debate and set out a long-term course.

  • The Herald's View
The Tom Roberts painting that captures the Duke of Cornwall and York (later King George V) opening Federal Parliament.

Pandemic border wars reveal the state of our nationhood

Australians risk jail by crossing a border within their own nation. But this strange federation has seen it all before.

  • by Tony Wright
Jack Wighton scored for the Blues but otherwise had a mixed night.

Banks play vaccination State of Origin while insurers sit on sidelines

Just how insurance companies will price their premiums to account for the COVID-unvaccinated is a thorny issue, a bit like the decisions being made by companies about whether their staff should be jabbed or not.

  • by Elizabeth Knight
WA Premier Mark McGowan notched up three major victories on Wednesday.
Analysis
Mark McGowan

Yuppies, bikies and a billionaire: McGowan takes down trifecta of ‘enemies of the state’ in one day

It was a day that neatly packaged up the winning formula for WA Premier Mark McGowan even after his March election that involves picking an adversary and going for the jugular.

  • by Hamish Hastie
Norm Provan
Opinion
NRL 2021

Why every Panthers player should read the tributes to Norm Provan

The anger over Penrith players disrespecting the premiership trophy spoke of the lasting admiration for the former St George captain-coach and rugby league Immortal, who has died after a long battle with dementia.

  • by Andrew Webster
Please Explain co-host Nathanael Cooper.

‘Swiss army knife of energy’: the pros and cons of green hydrogen

Today on Please Explain, business reporter Nick Toscano joins Nathanael Cooper to talk through the complexities of green hydrogen.

  • by Nathanael Cooper
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - OCTOBER 17: A security guard carries the Everest trophy during Everest Race Day at Royal Randwick Racecourse on October 17, 2020 in Sydney, Australia. Crowd limits were increased for The Everest race day with almost 11,000 people allowed to attend following approval of COVID-safe plans submitted to the NSW government. (Photo by Jenny Evans/Getty Images)

Rain dampens Everest extravaganza but scene remains set for great race

The sight of Peter V’landys hanging 10 on a surfboard would have been worth the price of admission. Unfortunately the weather gods had other ideas.

  • by Max Presnell
Oil prices have surged higher as supply tightens.

Energy crisis puzzle: why fossil fuel prices are surging

The prices of oil, gas and coal have skyrocketed through this year to levels not seen for years. The reasons why are complex.

  • by Stephen Bartholomeusz
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Claims have been aired that Facebook knew Instagram was worsening body-image issues among girls and did nothing.

The moral panic engulfing Instagram

We live in troubling times. But we can’t begin to solve our real problems if we keep getting wrapped up in exaggerated ones.

  • by Farhad Manjoo
Woodside plans to expand its Pluto LNG plant to process gas from Scarborough

Net-zero emissions and Woodside’s Scarborough LNG a mismatch: IEA

Woodside’s $16.4 billion Scarborough LNG may be too expensive for its aim to “prosper in a low-carbon world”, according to International Energy Agency’s analysis.

  • by Peter Milne
Australian Minister of Defence Peter Dutton.
Editorial
Defence

Dutton’s LGBTQI culture war undermines army morale

The Defence Minister’s ban on rainbow morning teas has reopened old wounds.

  • The Herald's View
Speaker Tony Smith speaks with Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese during Question Time.

Speaker who restored respect to the House will leave a gaping hole

When Tony Smith leaves the Speaker’s chair there will be a huge responsibility on future prime ministers to find someone to match him.

  • by Niki Savva
Into the simulator for pilots.
Opinion
Aviation

Qantas scrambles to retrain pilots as it plots path out of pandemic

Having come through the aviation industry’s most damaging black swan moment, Qantas is now facing a staffing hangover.

  • by Elizabeth Knight
NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet has backed green hydrogen to boost the economy and help reduce carbon emissions.
Opinion
Renewables

NSW hydrogen joins unstoppable energy revolution, yet tariffs pose big threat while we lump coal

Despite big advances on green energy, global carbon tariffs will punish Australia if it persists with fossil fuels. Modelling shows NSW would lose about 20,000 jobs and $5 billion in gross state product, and Queensland more than 50,000 jobs and $10 billion.

  • by Nicki Hutley
Justin Langer famous intensity has become infamous of late.

In all earnestness, Langer is a law unto himself and the end is nigh

We know Justin Langer’s a nice bloke. But after agreeing to rein in his intensity and earnestness to his senior players, he seems to have gone in the other direction.

  • by Peter FitzSimons
Professor Peter Ridd who has lost his appeal to the High Court.

Academic freedom recognised but sacked scientist fails in bid to be reinstated

The case brought by Peter Ridd was lost on the High Court finding he disrespected colleagues and violated university rules in a dispute over climate change

  • by Adrienne Stone
Future energy: Premier Dominic Perrottet, Deputy Premier Paul Toole and Treasurer Matt Kean on Wednesday with Fortescue Future Industries chairman Andrew Forrest.

Perrottet hears the future coming and jumps on board

The new Premier seizes opportunities and takes the attendant risks, but he cannot easily be pigeon-holed.

  • by Alexandra Smith
Dr Gavin Pattullo, who approaches the assisted dying debate as both a pain specialist and as the husband of a woman who chose to end her suffering. 
Opinion
Euthanasia

As a doctor and husband of a woman who chose the timing of her death, I offer some facts on assisted dying

My wife did not have the option of “assisted” dying. She had to make that choice alone. The debate over the law to come before the NSW Parliament should not be confounded by political hyperbole.

  • by Gavin Pattullo
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Peter Costello buys groceries on the first day of the GST ion July 1, 2000. The GST marks the last far-reaching reform of the nation’s tax system.
Analysis
Tax reform

It’s time to have another conversation about tax reform - or the goose is cooked

Taxes are the price of a civilised society and our tax system is struggling to properly raise the revenue. But there is a way forward.

  • by Shane Wright
The commission was asked to recommend the best legal framework for people who were suffering and dying to choose the manner and timing of their death.
Letters
Letters

Dying with dignity should be a basic human right

As someone who is facing his own mortality – I have bone cancer – I do not wish to spend my last days “doped to the eyeballs” or being kept alive by a machine.

In the Herald

In the Herald: October 14, 1863

School bazaar, a mighty kangaroo, and Tambaroora District news

  • by Lyn Maccallum
Jordan Clark.

The significance of pick 19

On the latest episode of the Real Footy podcast, Michael Gleeson, Jake Niall and Peter Ryan wrap trade period.

Essendon coach Ben Rutten.

Essendon highlight the Seinfeld trade period, and could have the last laugh

The 2021 trade period was more notable for what didn’t happen: This was the Seinfeld trade period, in that it was truly “a show about nothing”. Essendon was one club that held their draft and salary cap cards for another day.

  • by Jake Niall
Editorial
Tax reform

Reform of Australia’s tax system neglected for too long

Whichever party wins the next election needs to use the momentum of victory to make the case for change.

  • The Age's View
Column 8 Granny dinkus with mask.
Opinion
Column 8

Streets by any other name

And a moon rover in search of a lunar park.

Chad Wingard and Tom Mitchell.

Some of the pain, none of the gain: The Hawthorn fire sale that wasn’t

Hawthorn’s trade period was like the empty nesters who put the big old house up for sale, hoping to downsize to something smaller and new, only to watch it get passed in at auction.

  • by Michael Gleeson
Former Cricket Australia chairman Earl Eddings with Justin Langer on the Ashes tour in 2019.

Chairman’s demise must signal start of renewal for Cricket Australia

The sudden resignation of Cricket Australia chairman Earl Eddings should be the starting point for change.

  • by Malcolm Conn and Daniel Brettig
The
Opinion
Aged care

Sexual violence is a serious offence no matter the victim’s age

The regulator should explicitly require all criminal incidents involving aged care residents to be reported to police immediately.

  • by Daisy Smith, Meghan Wright, Amelia Grossi and Joseph Ibrahim
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Soap star Sam Frost posted a controversial video about vaccines which used the word “segregation”.

Anti-vaxxers hide privilege behind language of oppression

It is difficult to have empathy for those who claim they are now an oppressed class because of their decision to not be vaccinated.

  • by Nyadol Nyuon
Please Explain with Jess Irvine

Was JobKeeper money wasted?

Today on Please Explain, economics correspondent Shane Wright joins Jess Irvine to discuss a new analysis of the JobKeeper wage subsidy program.

  • by Jessica Irvine
China has churned out five-year plans since the 1950s, borrowing from the former Soviet Union.
Opinion
China

China’s new corruption investigation could exacerbate property crisis

China has launched an investigation of its key financial institutions and their regulators in the midst of the financial crisis enveloping its property sector.

  • by Stephen Bartholomeusz
Mark McGowan has McGowan has clad himself in the political armour of COVID-zero.

A difficult dismount from his COVID-zero ideal looms for McGowan

McGowan has in mind a soft landing which would see the virus begin to circulate in WA, but without overwhelming rates of hospitalisation or death as the vaccines do their protective work.

  • by Gareth Parker