Old Trafford -> New Trafford TRANSFORMATION 🔴
Manchester United’s next home is taking shape: a 100,000-seat “New Trafford” planned 350 metres northwest of Old Trafford and targeted to open by 2035. The current stadium will stay in use during construction, though its long-term fate remains undecided. Around it, a new Stadium District would add 15,000 homes, transport upgrades, public spaces, entertainment and thousands of jobs throughout Trafford.
So incompetent la yb @NajwanHalimi . Exactly macam paku kena ketuk.
Get down from your high horse and walk around. Ni baru kat sek13, banyak lagi area bawah jagaan you need the same attention.
Untuk makluman, pembinaan laluan pejalan kaki yang menghubungkan Stesen LRT Stadium Shah Alam ke AEON Mall di sepanjang Persiaran Sukan, Seksyen 13 sedang giat dilaksanakan dan dijangka akan siap sepenuhnya esok.
Saya dimaklumkan pada hari Selasa ini pihak @sacitycouncil akan meneruskan kerja-kerja pembinaan laluan pejalan kaki ini di sepanjang Persiaran Akuatik pula.
Terima kasih kepada semua pihak yang telah membangkitkan isu ini beberapa hari lalu.
🏴🤣 John Stones pretends his shoulder is hurt then begins to dance in the England changing room. 🕺
Tuchel was genuinely worried at one point that the injury was real. 😅
the craziest thing about being an adult is that you could go through the most traumatic night of your life and you'll just have to go to work the next day
🚨 Paul Pogba on Cristiano Ronaldo during his darkest period :
“When the suspension news came out, my phone was full for two days… then suddenly, silence. People I thought were brothers disappeared. Agents stopped calling. Friends became busy. Football can make you feel loved… but it can also show you who’s real.”
“But one name I didn’t expect to hear from was Cristiano.”
“He didn’t call me to talk about football, training, or headlines. He asked me one thing… ‘How is your family? Are you okay mentally?’ That hit me differently.”
“A few days later he told me, ‘If you need anything anything for your family, your recovery, your life call me. Pride should never stop you from accepting help.’”
“At that moment, I wasn’t talking to Cristiano Ronaldo the superstar… I was talking to a man who understood pain, pressure, and loneliness.”
“I’ve played with champions before… but in hard times, you discover who the real ones are.”
Prime Minister of Malaysia Anwar Ibrahim tells SNEAKO Malaysia does not recognize Israel as a state, citing ongoing atrocities and opposing colonization in all forms. 🇲🇾🇮🇱
The story behind the rise of USB-A is wild.
In 1990, an Intel engineer named Ajay Bhatt couldn't get his wife's printer to work for their daughter's school project. A printer. In his own house. He was a senior architect at the world's biggest chip company, and he couldn't make a printer talk to a PC without rebooting three times and opening the case.
He pitched the idea of a universal connector to his managers. They didn't just pass. They told him nobody would want it.
Bhatt switched teams, found a manager who said yes, and spent the next four years convincing Compaq, IBM, Microsoft, NEC, and Nortel to sit in the same room and agree on a single plug. Seven companies that competed on everything else agreed to share one connector. The USB 1.0 standard shipped in January 1996. Almost nobody used it. Windows 95 barely supported it. USB was basically dead on arrival.
Then Steve Jobs did something nobody expected. He shipped the 1998 iMac as USB-only. No serial port, no parallel port, no floppy drive. Just USB. Apple, the company that fought standards harder than anyone, single-handedly forced an entire industry onto Bhatt's connector.
Intel owned the patents. They made the entire thing royalty-free. Any manufacturer on earth could build a USB-A port for pennies. By 2009, 6 billion USB products were in the market, with 2 billion more shipping every year.
Making the connector reversible would have doubled the cost, so Bhatt kept it one-sided to keep adoption cheap. "In hindsight, we blew it," he said years later. The most cursed design decision in consumer electronics, and it was a deliberate trade.
USB-A killed serial ports, parallel ports, PS/2 connectors, game ports, and eventually the floppy disk. One rectangle replaced an entire generation of cables. The connector is 30 years old and as of 2024, Type-A still accounted for 46% of all USB device shipments. Billions of ports in airplane seatbacks, hotel nightstands, hospital beds, and office walls.
The EU mandated USB-C on all new devices in December 2024. The installed base of USB-A will take 20 years to turn over. One guy's printer problem became the most successful connector standard in computing history. And now the rest of us carry a bag of dongles everywhere we go because of it.