🇬🇭 GFA in talks with Walid Regragui to replace Otto Addo as Black Stars coach.
Regragui led Morocco to the semi-final of the 2022 World Cup and final of AFCON 2025.
More on the developing story from @garyalsmith 🎙️
#SportyFM
Mohamed Salah is to bring the curtain down on his illustrious career with Liverpool Football Club at the end of the 2025-26 season.
The time to fully celebrate his legacy and achievements will follow later in the year when he bids farewell to Anfield ❤️
Most streaming platforms rent space on third-party delivery networks to get their content to you. Netflix decided that wasn’t good enough so they built their own. They spent roughly $1 billion over a decade building a once-secret content delivery network called Open Connect, consisting of over 17,000 servers strategically placed across 158 countries.  While competitors pay companies like Akamai and Cloudfront to move their data around the world, Netflix owns the pipes.
Here’s why that matters. Even at the speed of optical fiber, it takes approximately 100 milliseconds for data to complete a roundtrip between Los Angeles and London.  Multiply that delay across millions of simultaneous streams and you get buffering. Netflix’s solution was to stop sending data across the world entirely. Instead, they place their cache servers directly inside ISP data centers bringing the content physically closer to you before you even press play.  By the time you hit play on a popular show, a copy of that video is likely already sitting on a server less than a mile from your home.
Then there’s how the video itself is delivered. Netflix doesn’t send you one fixed quality stream. It uses adaptive bitrate streaming dynamically adjusting video quality in real time based on your current connection speed.  Your internet slows down for two seconds and Netflix quietly drops the resolution, buffers ahead, and steps the quality back up before you notice anything. You never see a loading spinner. You just watch.
Netflix accounts for approximately 15% of global downstream internet traffic and at peak times, up to 15% of worldwide internet bandwidth.  All of it flowing smoothly, because a decade ago they made a bet that owning their infrastructure was worth a billion dollars.
And it was.
French Montana says "Unforgettable" (2017) don't get the credit for opening the door for Afro Music on a global scale.
"There was Afro Music before that but it wasn't global."
I think the song that did it was Drake & Wizkid's "One Dance" (2016)
The Euro 2020 final nearly ended in a stampede where people without tickets were forcing their way into Wembley.
2022 CL final was delayed by 40 mins due to chaos outside of Stade de France caused by French police.
But never it is pinned as a indictment on European football 🤷🏾♂️