Sunday 03-05-2026 8:18pm

Robot NEO for light duties

Pinnacle of the computer revolution

U.S.-based robotics firm 1X has started full-scale production of its humanoid robot NEO at a new manufacturing facility in Hayward, California. The factory marks a key step toward commercialising general-purpose humanoid robots designed for home use. The company says the robots are built to safely operate alongside humans and assist with everyday tasks such as mobility support, light household activity and routine interaction. Spanning 58,000 square feet, the facility employs more than 200 workers and is expected to expand further as production scales. It has the capacity to produce up to 10,000 robots annually, with plans to increase output beyond 100,000 units by 2027. The setup is designed for rapid iteration as hardware and AI systems evolve. The company has already seen strong early demand. It said its first-year production capacity of over 10,000 units sold out within five days of launch in October, signaling early commercial interest in humanoid home robotics. A key feature of the factory is its vertically integrated production model. 1X designs and manufactures core components in-house, including motors, batteries, sensors, structures and transmission systems. This approach allows the company to control the entire production process, from raw material handling to final assembly. Customer shipments are expected to begin later this year.


 SPORT:

Clogged sports results and cricket rejects privatisation

With three NRL and four AFL matches yesterday today's sports intro is clogged up. In the NRL the Roosters beat the Broncos 38-24 and the Warriors beat the Eels 36-14. The Raiders beat the Titans 28-12. In the AFL St Kilda stormed Carlton 108-69 and Geelong trounced North Melbourne 135-86. Richmond won 99-88 against the West Coast and Brisbane whipped Essendon 143-79. Phew! [click to read more]

Cricket Australia maintains privatisation of the BBL is inevitable despite its plans being halted by a revolt led by two key states, but has definitively ruled out one proposal.

Ben Horne and Robert Craddock I this morning’s Oz contend Mike Baird has strongly rebutted his home state’s counter proposal to incorporate wagering as a solution to Australian cricket’s cash crisis, after plans to privatise the Big Bash hit a brutal brick wall.

Cricket Australia were forced to confirm on Thursday that they must now consider alternate options to fixing the game’s perilous financial outlook after Queensland joined NSW in saying no to testing the market with private investors.

The likely avenue forward now for CA is to adopt South Australia’s more fence-sitting position, which is for the BBL to explore the prospect of privatising clubs in stages rather than all at once, with Victoria, Western Australia and Tasmania all emphatic in wanting to sell.

Privatisation now threatens to divide the game, but a solution is still needed to remedy the fact CA suffered an $11 million loss last year with dire forecasts of more pain in the years ahead, putting cricket at a crossroads.

Baird, the CA chairman and former NSW Premier, has declared that one proposal completely off the table is the revenue-raising alternative to privatisation put forward by Cricket NSW, which included a suggestion to increase returns from gambling partners.

Cricket NSW has stated that wagering is only one of many areas for raising current revenues outlined in their proposal, but Baird described gambling dollars and cuts to community cricket as being key pillars of NSW’s pitch, emphasising that CA had a social duty not to go down that path.

We have a majority of states that are very interested in proceeding (with privatisation), Baird told the Oz.

“There’s other options and models that they've put forward. We'll consider that detail.

“Clearly we don't have consensus now so there’s more work to do, but we'll continue that work. We can't ignore the opportunities but at the same time the challenges and we'll continue to do that.

We need time to consider that, to do that work, but what I can assure you is we will not be pursuing an option that puts gambling front and centre and cuts community cricket. That’s not a future that cricket should have. That’s not a future that cricket will have.


 STOCKMARKET:


 NEWS:

🎪 Jess
lectures
Liberals
on win

While Victorian Liberal members were dancing and chanting as they declared victory in the Nepean by-election last night, their leader Jess Wilson had a message for them: the party needed to take the lessons from the result, reports The Australian today's website..

The Liberals retained the seat in the face of a challenge from One Nation and an independent, increasing their 6.8% margin in the estimated two-candidate-preferred column, but had copped a 10-point swing against them on their primary vote in counting so far despite Labor not running a candidate. [click to read more]

On Saturday night Liberal candidate Anthony Marsh was leading independent Tracee Hutchison 63-37% two-candidate preferred with One Nation candidate Darren Hercus expected to finish third in first preferences, after the count reached about 80% of enrolment.

After walking into the Liberal election party at the Rye Hotel alongside Mr Marsh, to jubilant applause, Ms Wilson said she would take the lessons out of the result tonight.

We will take the learnings. And what we take away is that we have more work to do every single day to earn the trust of Victorians, she said.

“Tonight the equation has not changed. We still need to win 16 seats to change the government in November this year.

And my commitment to Victorians … is that I will listen to you, I don't take your vote for granted, I have to earn your vote, my team has to earn your vote.

Ms Wilson said the biggest lesson out of the result was that the Liberals needed to convince voters across the state to put a number one next to the Coalition at the November election.

The message is part of what Liberal strategists describe as a need to stay humble and communicate to party members that they face an uphill task in beating the Jacinta Allan government in November.

Ms Wilson said the electorate of Nepean, which is on the Mornington Peninsula southeast of Melbourne, had been neglected by the Labor government for too long and criticised the party for not running in the by-election.

The government did not even run a candidate here and that demonstrates how little they care about people on the Peninsula, she said.

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 LOCAL CHATTER:

Murrurundi Womens tackle team (NRL) drew with Singleton yesterday afternoon on the Wilson Memorial Oval. The Mavericks Reserve Grade scheduled for 3:00 was cancelled after a Greta forfeiture. Meanwhile, Tony Perkins rocked into your Museum yesterday with the meetings journal of the Murrurundi Football Club stretching from July 23, 1919 to January 1, 1949.
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Today is a petrol guzzling day with the Nundle Dog Races and live steam engines. The beautiful little town used to have lots of great events but with the aging population and covid the events have been curtailed. The gates open at 9:30.
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Watch a race or two and then nip on to the old back road to Tamworth for the Running of the Engines on from 9:00am to 2:00pm at the Tamworth Powerstation Museum. These are the mighty John Fowler Steam engines. They are the only working machinery of their kind (one of their kind is in Remembrance Park between the Museum and God's Waiting Room in Murrurundi) and at the same time learn why Tamworth is the “First City of Light” by taking on the challenge of their brand new ‘Kids Trail’.

 NEWS:

👰 Returning
brides costs
scrutinised

Security experts say ISIS brides returning to Australia from northeast Syria could cost authorities millions each to monitor, placing a ’significant burden' on taxpayers, the Sunday Telegraph newspaper today reports. [click to read more]

It comes as federal Opposition Leader Angus Taylor has written to the Albanese government demanding an explanation about whether the women will face criminal charges if they return.

High-level security sources have told The Sunday Telegraph the cost of monitoring high-risk individuals in the community, such as returning ISIS brides, could be in the area of $2 million a person, with some requiring at least two officers for constant, around-the-clock surveillance.

The cost for police to monitor just one of these women, including supervision and intelligence gathering, could be around $2 million or more, depending on how high-risk they are as each individual has different circumstances, one source said.

Another source said if the women were charged with offences such as entering a declared area, there would also be further costs to the taxpayers for reintegration programs and other support.

The Telegraph revealed last year that four convicted terrorists, who live in NSW, had been placed on Extended Supervision Orders (ESOs) by the Supreme Court after being deemed an unacceptable risk of committing another serious offence if they are not closely monitored.

ESOs for terrorism-related offences are subject to unannounced home visits, electronic monitoring, pre-approved movement schedules and curfews, drug and alcohol testing and scrutiny of electronic devices including mobile phones and laptops.

But security sources added that if the ISIS-linked women were charged, they had doubts it would lead to convictions, pointing to previous cases before the courts that had highlighted the legal challenges in securing successful prosecutions.

Meanwhile, government sources also raised concerns about whether ISIS-linked women could be eligible for welfare benefits.

Sources said depending on the ISIS-linked women’s personal circumstances, they could receive more than $45,000 a year in welfare benefits, if there are no restrictions notices placed on them, labelling it as a significant burden to the taxpayer.





💺 Airline
squeeze on
into new year

A major airline has delivered the worst possible news for Aussie travellers as the Middle East conflict and soaring fuel prices continue to wreak havoc on the industry, reports news.com.au website today. [click to read more]

A global squeeze on aviation capacity is set to continue into next financial year, with Qantas and Jetstar extending schedule changes as high fuel prices and ongoing Middle East disruption reshape international demand.

The Qantas Group said it was continuing to adjust its network to mitigate the impact of the conflict in the Middle East", including sustained high fuel costs, and to respond to continued strong demand for travel to Europe.

With fuel prices remaining significantly elevated, the airline group has extended previously announced changes across its international and domestic operations between July and September, pushing adjustments into the first quarter of next year.

Given fuel prices remain significantly elevated, the Qantas Group has extended previously announced schedule changes across its international and domestic network between July and September, the airline said in a statement on Friday.

On the international front, Qantas will continue redeploying some aircraft to increase services between Australia and Europe, giving customers booked on partner airlines more flexibility to switch if needed.

The airline’s additional Perth-Rome services have now been extended until the end of October, while flights to Paris will scale back to three return services per week from August as previously planned. Those services will continue to operate from Sydney via Singapore.

The changes collectively add about 2000 extra seats per week to and from Europe, reflecting continued strong demand on the route.

However, not all markets are growing. Qantas has temporarily suspended its Sydney-Bengaluru service from August, with a planned return at the end of October.

Capacity across the Tasman has also been reduced by both Qantas and Jetstar.

Overall, these adjustments reduce previously planned Group international capacity by 2% for the first quarter of FY27.

Domestically, the group has also extended earlier capacity reductions of 5% through to the end of September, largely affecting major capital city routes.

The group said customers affected by the changes were being contacted directly and offered alternative flights or refunds.

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💰 Profit
before
environment

'We don't hear the frogs, we don't see the birds': government repeatedly delayed water to NSW wetlands, documents reveal, The Guardian reports. [click to see].

A grazier has released emails that reveal the state’s environment and water department prioritised harvesting of winter cereal crops over wetlands

The New South Wales government has routinely delayed environmental flows to critical wetlands in the state’s north-west in favour of farming, despite admitting it could harm the breeding cycles of frogs and endangered birds and damage local ecosystems.

Two weeks ago, scientists had to scramble to rescue turtles after WaterNSW abruptly cut water flows to the internationally significant Gwydir region near Moree, after a complaint from a landowner.

Now, a local grazier has released emails that reveal the state’s environment and water department delayed the start of flows to parts of the region from spring until early summer to prioritise harvesting of winter cereal crops.

A concerned bureaucrat wrote to landholders on September 26, saying the ideal time to deliver beneficial wetland flow is now partly due to warm but mild conditions which with water would trigger wetland vegetation response and other species to breed such as frogs.

However, due to the 2025 winter cereal crop, an environmental water delivery will not occur until after they are harvested, they wrote.

Delaying delivery is at the detriment of the environment and environmental water accounts.

Environmental flows refer to water released by the government from dams and tributaries into rivers and ecosystems to restore their health.

The broader Gwydir wetlands region supports four Ramsar-listed sites and encompasses floodplains including the Gingham ∼ where the turtles were rescued ∼ the Mallowa and the Lower Gwydir watercourses.

Wildlife in the area relies on rain and floods, as well as environmental flows managed by state and federal governments in support of the Murray-Darling Basin plan.

Emails show environmental flows to several areas did not start until November or early December. In one instance, the Lower Gwydir, they began in October but at a reduced rate.

Further correspondence reveals the NSW environment and water department also held back flows in 2024, to wait for dryland farming operations on the floodplains to finish their winter cereal harvest. In the Mallowa they did the same in 2023.

Grazier Jonathon Guyer manages wetlands for conservation in the Mallowa watercourse. The property has been in his family’s hands for generations. Earlier this month, he spoke about how the cessation of flows by WaterNSW had caused endangered birds such as the Australasian bittern to flee the wetlands and led to the deaths of fledging waterbirds, frogs and sheep.

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 COMMENT:

Murrurundi Times news site with items covering national news and Upper Hunter region including the township of Murrurundi
While cities welcome visitors to Gadigal country", a little girl’s death reveals the devastating truth about life in remote Australia, Peta Credlin writes in the Daily Telegraph today. [click to read more]

It’s all very well welcoming people to Gadigal country in Sydney but how about we talk about the reality of life for so many Aboriginal people living outside our big cities.

Because it is the life lived in town camps ∼ best described as hellholes by Alice Springs local Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price ∼ that’s far more urgent today than who arrived 250 years ago.

We're not supposed to talk about Sharon Granites any more ∼ the sweet little five-year-old abducted last weekend ∼ because she’s dead. Her family want her described as Kumanjayi Little Baby for cultural reasons.

Modern day aboriginal culture

But it’s modern-day Aboriginal culture ∼ the unemployment, family dysfunction, and substance abuse that characterises remote Australia ∼ that’s led to her tragic, premature death.

The bed that this little girl was abducted from was a grotty mattress on a filthy floor, in a room full of empty Jim Beam bottles. Her father was in jail and there'd been a bit of a party before she disappeared. The DNA of two persons has been found on her underwear. Her accused killer was a frequent prison inmate too, not long released.

We talk a lot about reconciliation for the wrongs of the past. But what about rectifying the wrongs of the present? We argue incessantly about the failures of government to end Indigenous disadvantage but what about the failures of Aboriginal people too?

Town camps natorious

The town camps around Alice Springs have been notorious for years. Very few residents have real jobs, very few of the children go to school regularly, the police often feel powerless to enforce the law because they won't be supported by woke magistrates and weak governments and child protection officers feel they can't do what they otherwise would, for fear of creating another stolen generation.

Just because people happen to be Aboriginal doesn't mean that different standards apply.

The government says that this is not the time to talk about policy change. But if it’s not done now, everyone will move on until the next child dies.

Ask yourself this, would the outrage be different if this little girl and her alleged killer were from a nice suburb in the city? Where are the activists?


Murrurundi Times news site with items covering national news and Upper Hunter region including the township of Murrurundi
That the African slave trade was a monstrosity, inflicting unspeakable cruelty on millions of innocent victims, is beyond dispute. But the resolution the UN General Assembly passed two weeks ago, marking the trade’s commemoration, is nothing less than an appalling falsification of history, Henry Ergas writes in the The Australian today. [click to read more]

Formally, the resolution condemns the African slave trade as a whole. Substantively, every concrete reference targets the transatlantic trade, fixating on a racialised capitalist system and its purported Western antecedents. The cumulative effect is unmistakeable: to brand the trade a distinctively Western crime.

To sustain that impression, the resolution parades a sequence of decrees, starting with the papal bulls of 1452 and 1455, which it casts as the founding charters of the enslavement and structural racism that still unjustly impoverishes Africa, thereby grounding a claim to substantial reparations.

Text turns conspicuously evasive

Yet, having been forensically specific about blame, the text turns conspicuously evasive when it confronts the forces that brought the Atlantic trade to an end. The Enlightenment, the abolitionist movements, and the Western legal and political campaigns that culminated in the trade’s eventual demise are, it appears, unmentionable.

While the offending decrees are named, dated and indicted, the tide of opposition to slavery, which gathered momentum in the 17th century, is dismissed as certain legal challenges and judicial developments in the 18th century that questioned the legality and morality of chattel enslavement.

That descent into vagueness reflects a deliberate strategy: to particularise the guilt while diluting the credit. Merely cataloguing the misrepresentations, confusions and factual errors this strategy produces would require far more space than is available here. What is especially striking, however, are the omissions.

Intellectually dishonest

It is, for example, intellectually dishonest to invoke the papal bulls of 1452 and 1455 while ignoring Pope Paul III’s bull of 1537, which denounced as an invention of the devil the idea that native peoples should be treated as dumb brutes created for our service, and affirmed that they may and should, freely and legitimately, enjoy their liberty.

Paul III’s exhortations had limited immediate effect; so too did Cartwright’s Case (1569), which declared that England’s air was too pure for slaves to dwell in. What matters is what they reveal: an unceasing moral interrogation of slavery within the West itself — an interrogation that gave abolitionism the bedrock on which to build.

Intellectually dishonest

Here, too, the resolution’s selectivity is purposeful. It allows it to avoid an obvious and crucial comparator: the long history of slavery under Islamic rule, which it ignores altogether. From the Arab conquests to the early 20th century, some 14 million black slaves were transported into the lands of Islam via the trans-Saharan, Red Sea and Indian Ocean routes, with nearly a million more carried beyond the East African coast. Add to these more than a million white slaves, and the total comfortably exceeds the 10 million to 12 million who landed in the Americas.

Yet the numbers are not what is most significant. The salient fact is the absence of any sustained doctrinal or institutional challenge to the morality and legality of the slave trade within the Islamic world — even where it starkly contradicted the Koranic prohibition on enslaving Muslims. As Bruce Hall shows in his study of Saharan and Sahelian slavery, by the 19th century ∼ when the West was vigorously suppressing chattel slavery ∼ the operative presumption among Maliki jurists was that black Africans, routinely described as savages, were enslavable by default, whatever their faith.

Muslims still slaved away

There were individuals who objected strenuously to chattel slavery, such as Syrian reformer Abd al-Rahman al-Kawakibi (1855-1902); but no Muslim opponent of slavery ever forged those concerns into a mass movement. Bernard Lewis’s verdict that even the most radical Muslim modernists fell well short of matching the fervour and effectiveness of Western abolitionists retains all its force.

It is therefore unsurprising that Islam’s leading theologians, far from championing abolition, actively resisted it — beginning with the infamous 1855 fatwa, issued with the full authority of Mecca’s Shaykh Jamal, which declared any prohibition of the slave trade contrary to the holy law of Islam and any official who attempted to enforce it lawful to kill.

Nor is it surprising that Saudi Arabia and Yemen abolished slavery only in 1962, the United Arab Emirates in 1964, Oman in 1970, and Mauritania ∼ after repeated ineffectual measures ∼ in 2007. Moreover, even where slavery was formally abolished, forms of vassalage have remained firmly in place: of the 10 countries with the highest incidence of modern slavery, eight are majority-Muslim.

Suffering olympics

But the resolution does not merely distort history by pretending Islamic slavery didn't exist. It declares the slave trade the greatest crime against humanity ever committed. Although not explicitly stated, a central purpose of this travesty ∼ which converts the horrors of the past into a suffering Olympics ∼ is again transparent: to relativise the Holocaust.

It is frankly obscene to degrade moral evaluation into a body count, with medals of ignominy awarded by a show of hands. Yet even in so repulsive a spectacle, realities should have been allowed to intrude. Those realities are well known. Death rates in the Holocaust ∼ whose unrelenting aim was the complete extermination of Jews ∼ were close to or above 90%. So complete was the indifference to fatalities that the German railways were paid whether the Jews being shipped by them lived or died during their transport — and the few who survived the journeys were killed, on average, within days of arrival.

In contrast, as investor Thomas Starke wrote to Captain James Westmore in 1700, the whole benefit of the voyage lyes in your care of preserving negroes' lives. As a result, strenuous efforts were made to ensure slaves remained alive and saleable, including by granting handsome bonuses to captains for high survival rates and imposing stiff penalties for excess mortality.

Black deaths declined dramatically

Although those efforts hardly eliminated the trade’s horrors, they did mean that by the late 18th century, death rates for black slaves on the middle passage had declined dramatically, to the point where they were only marginally greater than those for crews. To pretend otherwise is to erase the distinction between exploitation and extermination: for there was nothing in the slave trade even remotely comparable to the systematic mass murder at the heart of the Holocaust.

But to acknowledge those facts ∼ which flatly contradict the assault on the standing of the Holocaust ∼ might have eroded the overwhelming support the resolution secured. And the composition of that support says everything one needs to know about the resolution.

Thus, every one of the 20 countries that have the highest incidence of modern slavery and forced labour cynically voted in its favour; so did all the authoritarian states that participated in the vote, with the exception of Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan; and, again with the exception of Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan, it received the active backing of every Muslim-majority country.

Yet that is not the real tragedy. Rather, it is that only three Western countries ∼ the US, Israel and Argentina ∼ had the decency to vote against the falsification of history, instead of abstaining, as Australia and the European Union did. Those three were willing to oppose this charade. Why weren't we?



 OVERSEAS:

Russia didn’t become authoritarian overnight. At our new exhibition in Localie Hub in Amsterdam, rare photographs from The Moscow Times’ archive capture a country suspended between hope and despair, between democracy and a return to Soviet-style repression. From the chaos of the 1990s to the symbols of a new authoritarian era, these images document the moments, faces and contradictions that shaped modern Russia. The exhibition is open daily through June 10 from 11:00 to 19:00, and admission is free.

The Moscow Times reminds President Vladimir Putin has long used Victory Day, the annual holiday marking the Soviet defeat of Nazi Germany, as a showcase of Russia’s military might to the world. Since 2008, Moscow has staged extravagant parades on Red Square featuring tanks, missile systems, trucks and other military hardware. But not this year. This week, in an announcement conspicuously timed around midnight, the Defense Ministry revealed the event would go forward next Saturday without any vehicles. Servicemen from several military schools, as well as the cadet corps, will also be absent. Speculation has swirled as to why the Kremlin would so drastically scale back the parade, one of Putin’s most important political spectacles. The Kremlin blamed the decision on the “terrorist activities” of the “Kyiv regime,” which has indeed been ramping up its drone strikes on targets inside Russia lately — especially on oil refineries. But as one military expert told us, it was a “purely political” move to prevent any embarrassing scenes from being broadcast to the nation in real-time. A traffic jam of tanks caused by a drone attack would certainly not be a good look. The expert also said they expected the authorities to introduce mobile internet shutdowns in Moscow for the duration of the celebrations. And, just in case anyone was wondering: Donald Trump was not invited to attend the Moscow parade, the Kremlin confirmed. What else happened this week: ■ Twin environmental disasters have been unfolding in Tuapse, a port town on the Black Sea and Perm, a city some 2000 kilometers to the northeast, as Ukrainian drones struck oil refineries and other industrial sites in a bid to hamstring Moscow’s oil and gas windfalls. ■ Poland released a prominent Russian archeologist wanted in Ukraine for excavations in annexed Crimea. U.S. officials confirmed that they helped broker the release as part of a wider prisoner swap. ■ A senior veterinary official in the Novosibirsk region was found dead, weeks after government-enforced mass cattle culls triggered rare protests by farmers. ■ The head of the republic of Dagestan will step down later this year to transition to a new position after deadly floods ravaged the North Caucasus region. ■ A Chechen member of a newly formed European advisory body for exiled Russian dissidents was suspended after comments he made about LGBTQ+ people and so-called “honor killings” in the North Caucasus.






The Murrurundi Times is owned, compiled and written by Des Dugan. Email