Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn crash. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn crash. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Sáu, 5 tháng 4, 2013

At least 36 killed in Nigeria bus crash

AT least 36 people have been killed in a collision between a bus and a petrol tanker in southern Nigeria.

The tanker exploded after Friday's collision in Nigeria's Edo state, and most of the victims were reportedly on board the bus.

Federal Road Safety Corps spokesman Jonas Agwu said three people survived the collision.

Agwu said the crash resulted in a fire that burned for hours, making it difficult for officials to know how many people died.

Nigeria has some of West Africa's worst roads, despite its oil wealth. Massive potholes and poor paving, coupled with aggressive drivers, are blamed for many crashes. World Health Organization data shows Nigeria suffers from one of the world's highest traffic fatality rates.


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Thứ Ba, 2 tháng 4, 2013

Bodies found in plane crash search

crash family

Stuart Sceney, with partner Karmi and daughters Mekdes and Kal Source: Northern Territory News

THREE bodies have been found within the search site for a missing light aircraft in the Northern Territory.

Northern Territory Police have confirmed the body of a female was recovered late this afternoon, washed up on a beach, while a further two bodies were discovered later in the day.

An air and sea search was launched last night by AMSA after reports a plane failed to reach its destination south of Darwin, after leaving Bullo River Station mid-yesterday afternoon.

Believed to be on board were 45-year-old Stuart Sceney, his 53-year-old partner Karmi and 12 and 15-year old daughters Mekdes and Kal.

"Late this afternoon a body was discovered washed up on a beach in the south of the search area near Cape Ford," said Acting Commander Mark Christopher.


"A forensics team is on its way to the site to recover the body in preparation for formal identification."

"The search continues for the plane's fuselage and passengers.

Read more on this story at the Northern Territory News.

- with AAP


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NSW man in hospital after hay truck crash

A MAN who spent the night trapped in a crashed truck in NSW's west is recovering in hospital.

Police said the man, 64, was forced to spend the night in the cab of his truck, which was carrying hay, after it ran off an embankment near Lithgow at about 9pm (AEDT) on Tuesday.

The man, from Young, was found about 7.20am on Wednesday and airlifted to Liverpool Hospital, where he's being treated for leg injuries and hypothermia.

Police are urging anyone who witnessed the crash to come forward.


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Thứ Hai, 25 tháng 3, 2013

How did family survive this crash?

Crash

The guard rail tangled in the car. Picture: Bill Hearne Source: The Daily Telegraph

A FAMILY road trip has ended centimetres from tragedy when their out of control car left the road and became entangled in a guard rail in Sydney?s north west early this morning.

A mother in her thirties and her three children, aged one, three and five, all walked away from the crash in West Pennant Hills with minor injuries.

Just down the hill from a set of lights at the intersection of Eaton Road and Pennant Hills Road 20 metres of guard rail was wiped out and strewn across the footpath showing the Toyota’s path of devastation.

Crash

The guard rail just misses every family member in the car. Picture: Bill Hearne Source: The Daily Telegraph

Amongst the mess of twisted metal the rail pierced and speared its way through the front windscreen and out the left tail light grazing the cheek of a child in a booster seat in between.

“The kids’ had a lucky day,” one officer at the scene said.

“The rail glanced the side of the young girl’s face.”

Emergency services shook their heads in disbelief that nobody had died such was the complex devastation wrought to the car by the metal railing twisting in and out of it.

At the roadside the mother held her children as they were cared for by paramedics with one little girl wrapped in a blanket and helped onto a stretcher before being wheeled into an ambulance.

As the family was looked after a procession of semi-trailers and oversized trucks slowly motored past craning their necks to view the roadside carnage.

Crash

A pole narrowly misses a child. Picture: Bill Hearne Source: The Daily Telegraph

The distraught mother was seen on her phone while her remaining son and daughter sat peacefully to the side of the wreck seemingly oblivious to how close to serious harm they had come.

After they had been checked out they were put into the ambulance along with their sister and the family was taken to Westmead Children’s Hospital with injuries including a suspected fractured arm and cuts and bruising to the face.

A roadside breath test came back negative with police suspecting fatigue was a factor in the crash.


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4 CSIRO men killed in chopper crash named

FOUR CSIRO scientists killed in a helicopter crash south of Sydney have been named by police.

The Robinson R44 light helicopter clipped a tree about 12.10pm (AEDT) on Thursday while attempting to land on a grassy area next to the popular landmark, Panorama House, at Bulli Tops.

Restaurant staff rushed out with fire extinguishers as it burst into flames, but they were beaten back by the heat.

All four men died at the scene.

The victims, all from Sydney, were Anthony Farmer, 68, of North Epping, Donald Price, 67, of Lindfield, Gerald Haddad, 71, of Elanora Heights and John Dunlop, 66, of Davidson.


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Thứ Sáu, 22 tháng 3, 2013

Chopper in fatal NSW crash had risky tanks

A HELICOPTER that burst into flames when it crashed south of Sydney, killing four people, was fitted with older-style fuel tanks known to pose a fire hazard.

The victims of the fiery crash at Bulli Tops on Thursday are all believed to have been former CSIRO employees who were trying to land near Panorama House, a popular restaurant and wedding venue.

The Robinson R44 light helicopter clipped a tree about 12.10pm (AEDT) before crashing and igniting.

Staff ran out with fire extinguishers but were repelled by the heat of the blaze.

They were unable to save the pilot and three passengers.

A NSW Police spokeswoman said on Friday the deceased had not yet been formally identified, but AAP understands all four were former CSIRO workers.

Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB) investigators arrived at the crash site late on Thursday and are expected to remain there for days.

The ATSB has confirmed the helicopter involved in the accident was still fitted with dangerous all-aluminium fuel tanks, years after helicopter operators were warned to upgrade them.

"The ATSB has highlighted how all-aluminium fuel tanks have proven susceptible to post-accident fuel leaks, increasing the risk of a potentially fatal post-impact fire when colliding with the ground," it said on its website on Friday.

The manufacturer and the ATSB have previously recommended that the fuel tanks on R44s be replaced with safer bladder-type tanks.

The ATSB said manufacturer's figures showed 4000 R44s had been built with the all-aluminium tanks but only 1700 retrofit kits had gone out so far.

A service bulletin issued by the manufacturer in 2010 told operators the retro-fitting needed to be carried out "as soon as practical, but no later than 30 April 2013".


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Chủ Nhật, 10 tháng 3, 2013

Aussies cranky as SimCity servers crash

Take a look at the latest city simulator

UPDATE (6.02pm): THE servers hosting Aussie gamers trying to play SimCity have crashed causing nationwide outrage.

On its Facebook page, EA Games announced that it was "aggressively undergoing maintenance on the SimCity servers and adding capacity to meet demand".

"Performance will fluctuate during this process," it wrote. "Our fans are important to us, and we thank you for your continued patience."

Gamers are understandably furious at the server issues that have been plaguing the game's global launch. The US experienced similar problems during the American launch on Tuesday. EA promised they were working to ensure it prevented a repeat performance during the global launch today. Sadly that promise was broken.

"Want to fix SimCity EA? Get rid of the stupid DRM and servers!

We don't need them to play a single player game," wrote one Facebook user.

"It's a poor excuse to combat piracy as it makes people pirate and break your game anyway.

"Get of your frickin' high horse. Stop being such a Scrooge McDuck. It doesn't combat piracy in any way."

Sim City

Once you get past the errors and the glitches, the game itself is addictive, according to IGN. Picture: EA

Another person wrote: "Release game with "Always online DRM" wonder why consumers freak out when their servers fail. I love EA's logic."

EA Announced its servers had crashed about 40 minutes ago and it has already accumulated more than 100 reply comments, mostly negative.

The company released this statement to news.com.au:

"We are experiencing extremely high server volume and it’s preventing some players from gaining access to the game. Our server team is working around the clock to resolve this issue so that we can get the rest of our fans into the game. We are aggressively undergoing maintenance on our servers to add the necessary capacity to meet the demand. Players may continue to play throughout the weekend but we want to note that performance will fluctuate during this time. We thank our fans for their continued patience."

SIMCITY has limped into existence after a series of server issues crippled the systems, bringing any attempts at gaming to a halt.

The remake of the original game, which was first released in 1989, launched in the US on Tuesday, amid technical problems. The game is rolling out to the rest of the world today and signs aren't good.

"Due to the high demand for SimCity, Origin has experienced delays impacting a small percentage of users. We're working non-stop to resolve," the company tweeted yesterday.

"We're making changes to prevent further issues, and are confident that Origin will be stable for international launches later this week."

Despite this, the global launch of SimCity seems to have been disastrous.

Part of the problem is caused by the fact that you need an internet connection to play. Technology blog Tech Dirt called this decision "ridiculous and seriously inhibited playability".

"For one, no one's internet connection is perfectly reliable. Secondly, SimCity was going further than most games, allowing only server-side saves, meaning that players could easily lose progress if their connections dropped," it wrote.

On top of that, every game is multiplayer, whether you like it or not. Not every user is going to want a social gaming experience. Also every game requires a server slot, meaning that an internet connection isn't the only thing standing between you and the game.

SimCity tweet 2

Source: Supplied

One Reddit user wrote: "I figured from everything I'd read that the always-on part of the game simply required an internet connection, not a slot on a server like I'm about to PvP or something. I'd be more understanding if I could just play my private region by myself like I intended."

SimCity is also a PC-only game that doesn't work on Macs. This is driving people bonkers.

Users are being locked out of playing games they have already purchased, and others are still waiting for it to download.

According to TotalBiscuit's video review the performance is so bad that people who pre-ordered the game are rebuying it because new purchases are unlocking immediately, while pre-purchases are taking a long time to load and organised people are having to wait longer for their purchases to be validated.

Server issues are continuing to plague gamers.

Users are reporting that they can't actually log in to play the game. Others say the game itself is broken.

One user @TheSimSupply tweeted this morning: "Yeah the game is broken, can't do anything, the tutorial doesn't work, I can't make my own city, I can't place roads, or anything."

One user @caflynn wrote that they were only able to play once in 24 hours due to server issues. "@ea Fix. Your. Servers. #failuretolaunch," said the tweet.

Another user @nickstires tweeted that they bought the game more than a week ago but said it wouldn't show in their Origin account.

Luke Reilly, IGN Australia's news editor told News.com.au that it was disappointing that SimCity had been "hobbled" by connection issues.

"It's not surprising for a game that requires an always-online connection to be crippled on launch due to the stress of so many players – we saw it happen with Diablo III – but it's certainly frustrating," he said.

SimCity tweet 2

Source: Supplied

Mr Reilly said EA has explained the reason for the always-online requirement is that portions of the computing behind the region simulation in Sim City is done on the server-side, rather than on users' computers.

"Multiplayer has always been a focus for Maxis with this SimCity but perhaps EA should have looked into some sort of straightforward, single-player mode that didn't require this sort of connectivity," he said.

"Gamers have been worried about the impact this always-online guff would have on the game and, at least at the moment, their concerns were justified. Some people just want to play SimCity by themselves, whenever they want, just like they did back in 1989.

"Of course, it's not as if EA wanted to launch of SimCity to be problematic but as digital distribution skyrockets publishers need to get better at making it work from day one. "
 

IGN's Dan Stapleton is blogging his experience of playing SimCity, as he plays.

Check out the video below to find out what it's like to actually play the game.

Or visit IGN for his detailed notes.

EA has been contacted for comment.

Once you get into the game, the experience is great, according to IGN.

The executive editor of IGN PlayStation, Greg Miller said he was initially worried that SimCity had "grown up too much" due to its focus on things like waste removal and traffic patterns but said his fears were unfounded.

"SimCity is as deep as it is charming, but the game ramps up so smoothly that when I got to worrying about where all of my citizens’ poop was going, I had a handle on the insanity," he wrote.

SimCity tweet 3

Source: Supplied

Unlike previous versions of the game, SimCity starts with roads. You can choose between dirt roads or asphalt, multi-lane highways or single lanes. However, the roads decide what kind of buildings that area can support, so if you want skyscrapers next to a dirt road - that's probably not going to happen. (Though we can't imagine why you would).

The game seems to be based on macroeconomics and the goal is to expand. So if you build a healthcare clinic, then you can buy ambulance garages for the property and then in turn expand the healthcare's reach, he wrote.

"Once your garbage dump starts getting overrun, you can add multiple incinerators to deal with the trash. When your Town Hall is placed, you can plop down departments that give you access to different buildings and perks."

It's a fascinating experiment in real-world town planning that has the potential to make people think about gaming solutions to real world problems.

SimCity tweet 4

Source: Supplied


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