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New Island provides full ITSM capabilities from AWS with locally hosted BMC Helix – Intelligent CIO Africa

New Island Technologies, the BMC distributor in Sub-Saharan Africa, has confirmed the local availability of the BMC Helix Platform in South Africa.

The announcement of the in-country roll-out of BMC Helix, provides partners and customers access to the first cloud-native, micro-services-based platform hosted on AWS.

With BMC Helix, BMC, a global provider of IT solutions for the digital enterprise, is delivering the industrys first and only intelligence-enriched, integrated IT Service Management (ITSM) and IT Operations Management (ITOM) platform. Building on leading Cognitive Service Management (CSM) capabilities, BMC Helix now includes both ITSM and ITOM capabilities enabling organisations to proactively and predictively discover, monitor, optimise, remediate and deliver an omni-channel service experience for IT and line-of-business. These services will be delivered out of the AWS Cloud data centres in Cape Town, South Africa.

Enterprises are experiencing a tech tsunami with trends like multi-cloud, multi-device (IoT), multi-channel, DevOps, AI, Machine Learning and bots creating enormous complexities in their IT landscapes, said Marten van Heerden, Head of Solutions at New Island Technologies.

To help manage this complexity, BMC is converging ITSM and ITOM capabilities into a unified BMC Helix platform to deliver the next-gen service experience for the Autonomous Digital Enterprise. Furthermore, the fact that they are able to access the solution off of a local cloud instance through New Island a local distributor, ensures customers can maintain the data sovereignty often required for hosting solutions in the cloud, added van Heerden.

BMC Helix empowers IT and business users to eliminate silos, make better informed decisions and future-proof the service and operations experience.

With the addition of the ITOM portfolio, BMC has now added the BMC Helix Remediate, BMC Helix Optimise and BMC Helix Monitor solutions to the BMC Helix suite.

Through the addition of these services customers can intelligently and automatically: discover unknown assets across multi-cloud and on-prem environments; proactively and predictively monitor events, alerts, and anomalies; uncover and remediate security vulnerabilities and secure systems; optimise capacity and cost across an organisations multi-cloud landscape; proactively provide an omni-channel service experience for the enterprise from IT to line-of-business.

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IT infrastructure that’s agile – ITWeb

Denver Pillay, IT Account Manager, Rittal South Africa

Prior to the COVID-19 lockdown, South African businesses were gearing up for the fourth industrial revolution and the required digitalisation. Workloads were increasingly moving to the cloud, and with greater demand for processing power came greater demand for data centres to accommodate the workload. Adding to this was the need for companies to manage their data in a manner that was compliant with regulations such as the local Protection of Personal Information Act and the General Data Protection Regulation of the EU. More recently, lockdown has accelerated this journey, says Denver Pillay, IT Account Manager at Rittal South Africa.

IT trends indicate that well be facing enormous challenges in the years to come. Digital twins, autonomous things, artificial intelligence, augmented analytics and smart cities are just a few of the technologies that will rely heavily on high-performance networks and powerful data centres.

Industry 4.0, the associated demand for edge computing and the ability to process big data are creating a need for the rapid deployment of IT infrastructure. Businesses are collecting tons of data from various sources, including their customers, which needs to be processed.

Digitalisation demands the continuous, fast supply of dedicated IT processing. All of this has led to demand for IT infrastructure thats scalable within a short time frame, user-friendly, accessible for technicians and allows more compute power to fit into a smaller footprint, says Pillay.

So what should customers look for when wanting to set up a data centre infrastructure? Pillay notes three characteristics:

1. Modularity

A modular IT infrastructure enables speedy set-up, explains Pillay. Companies are looking at collecting data quickly and efficiently. The faster that they can upscale their equipment, the faster they can start processing data, which in turn helps to drive sales and marketing initiatives. If you consider that it takes on average three months to set up IT infrastructure, thats a three-month delay in the gathering and processing of that data. Businesses require solutions that can be implemented much faster so that they can scale up and down quickly. Modularity is the solution here clients are able to pay as they grow, instead of having to fit out 20 racks at the outset, which means they arent laying out big amounts of capex up front.

2. Accessibility

Technicians wanting to carry out maintenance work in the data centre will find doors that open 180 degrees much more user-friendly, also offering better escape routes should they be required. The ability to remove doors without using tools saves them valuable time to work on the rack. Also, greater accessibility through the side panels will make it easier for technicians to access cables without dismantling the rack first.

3. Smaller physical footprint

IT infrastructure racks with greater load bearing capacity mean that fewer racks will be required, optimising space usage in the data centre. Having more capacity in the same space is invaluable to accommodate future demand for more infrastructure and computing power, says Pillay.

If you consider that the average rack supports 1 000kg of equipment, which is the equivalent of five servers, implementing a rack that can hold 1 500kgs offers the ability to load significantly more servers onto that rack. From a co-location point of view, it means being able to put more racks into a data centre, which makes solid economic sense.

What the future might hold.

Pillay says there are two ways to look at the future of IT infrastructure. First and foremost you have to think about the future of cloud computing, particularly where the focus is on hosting infrastructure at a cloud facility, which will result in more cloud hosting facility requirements. However, there is also legislation that requires businesses to host certain types of data on-premises. This means that the majority of data will be kept in the cloud, but therell be demand for edge data centres in the form of smart IT racks that have all of the capabilities of a data centre but in the form of just one or two racks.

Compliance with POPIA, GDPR and data protection legislation will create opportunities for edge computing and in turn for cloud hosting facilities. Greater demand means that hosting facilities will have to expand their capacity, but if they can do this quickly, and without expanding their physical footprint, they will benefit from a time and cost perspective," says Pillay.

Enterprises wanting to establish a co-location or hosted cloud facility should look for the following when designing their infrastructure, according to Pillay:

To find out more about how you can design an optimal space-saving data centre, click here.

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IT infrastructure that's agile - ITWeb

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Quantum mechanics is immune to the butterfly effect – The Economist

That could help with the design of quantum computers

Aug 15th 2020

IN RAY BRADBURYs science-fiction story A Sound of Thunder, a character time-travels far into the past and inadvertently crushes a butterfly underfoot. The consequences of that minuscule change ripple through reality such that, upon the time-travellers return, the present has been dramatically changed.

The butterfly effect describes the high sensitivity of many systems to tiny changes in their starting conditions. But while it is a feature of classical physics, it has been unclear whether it also applies to quantum mechanics, which governs the interactions of tiny objects like atoms and fundamental particles. Bin Yan and Nikolai Sinitsyn, a pair of physicists at Los Alamos National Laboratory, decided to find out. As they report in Physical Review Letters, quantum-mechanical systems seem to be more resilient than classical ones. Strangely, they seem to have the capacity to repair damage done in the past as time unfolds.

To perform their experiment, Drs Yan and Sinitsyn ran simulations on a small quantum computer made by IBM. They constructed a simple quantum system consisting of qubitsthe quantum analogue of the familiar one-or-zero bits used by classical computers. Like an ordinary bit, a qubit can be either one or zero. But it can also exist in superposition, a chimerical mix of both states at once.

Having established the system, the authors prepared a particular qubit by setting its state to zero. That qubit was then allowed to interact with the others in a process called quantum scrambling which, in this case, mimics the effect of evolving a quantum system backwards in time. Once this virtual foray into the past was completed, the authors disturbed the chosen qubit, destroying its local information and its correlations with the other qubits. Finally, the authors performed a reversed scrambling process on the now-damaged system. This was analogous to running the quantum system all the way forwards in time to where it all began.

They then checked to see how similar the final state of the chosen qubit was to the zero-state it had been assigned at the beginning of the experiment. The classical butterfly effect suggests that the researchers meddling should have changed it quite drastically. In the event, the qubits original state had been almost entirely recovered. Its state was not quite zero, but it was, in quantum-mechanical terms, 98.3% of the way there, a difference that was deemed insignificant. The final output state after the forward evolution is essentially the same as the input state before backward evolution, says Dr Sinitsyn. It can be viewed as the same input state plus some small background noise. Oddest of all was the fact that the further back in simulated time the damage was done, the greater the rate of recoveryas if the quantum system was repairing itself with time.

The mechanism behind all this is known as entanglement. As quantum objects interact, their states become highly correlatedentangledin a way that serves to diffuse localised information about the state of one quantum object across the system as a whole. Damage to one part of the system does not destroy information in the same way as it would with a classical system. Instead of losing your work when your laptop crashes, having a highly entangled system is a bit like having back-ups stashed in every room of the house. Even though the information held in the disturbed qubit is lost, its links with the other qubits in the system can act to restore it.

The upshot is that the butterfly effect seems not to apply to quantum systems. Besides making life safe for tiny time-travellers, that may have implications for quantum computing, too, a field into which companies and countries are investing billions of dollars. We think of quantum systems, especially in quantum computing, as very fragile, says Natalia Ares, a physicist at the University of Oxford. That this result demonstrates that quantum systems can in fact be unexpectedly robust is an encouraging finding, and bodes well for potential future advances in the field.

This article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition under the headline "A flutter in time"

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Major quantum computational breakthrough is shaking up physics and maths – The Conversation UK

MIP* = RE is not a typo. It is a groundbreaking discovery and the catchy title of a recent paper in the field of quantum complexity theory. Complexity theory is a zoo of complexity classes collections of computational problems of which MIP* and RE are but two.

The 165-page paper shows that these two classes are the same. That may seem like an insignificant detail in an abstract theory without any real-world application. But physicists and mathematicians are flocking to visit the zoo, even though they probably dont understand it all. Because it turns out the discovery has astonishing consequences for their own disciplines.

In 1936, Alan Turing showed that the Halting Problem algorithmically deciding whether a computer program halts or loops forever cannot be solved. Modern computer science was born. Its success made the impression that soon all practical problems would yield to the tremendous power of the computer.

But it soon became apparent that, while some problems can be solved algorithmically, the actual computation will last long after our Sun will have engulfed the computer performing the computation. Figuring out how to solve a problem algorithmically was not enough. It was vital to classify solutions by efficiency. Complexity theory classifies problems according to how hard it is to solve them. The hardness of a problem is measured in terms of how long the computation lasts.

RE stands for problems that can be solved by a computer. It is the zoo. Lets have a look at some subclasses.

The class P consists of problems which a known algorithm can solve quickly (technically, in polynomial time). For instance, multiplying two numbers belongs to P since long multiplication is an efficient algorithm to solve the problem. The problem of finding the prime factors of a number is not known to be in P; the problem can certainly be solved by a computer but no known algorithm can do so efficiently. A related problem, deciding if a given number is a prime, was in similar limbo until 2004 when an efficient algorithm showed that this problem is in P.

Another complexity class is NP. Imagine a maze. Is there a way out of this maze? is a yes/no question. If the answer is yes, then there is a simple way to convince us: simply give us the directions, well follow them, and well find the exit. If the answer is no, however, wed have to traverse the entire maze without ever finding a way out to be convinced.

Such yes/no problems for which, if the answer is yes, we can efficiently demonstrate that, belong to NP. Any solution to a problem serves to convince us of the answer, and so P is contained in NP. Surprisingly, a million dollar question is whether P=NP. Nobody knows.

The classes described so far represent problems faced by a normal computer. But computers are fundamentally changing quantum computers are being developed. But if a new type of computer comes along and claims to solve one of our problems, how can we trust it is correct?

Imagine an interaction between two entities, an interrogator and a prover. In a police interrogation, the prover may be a suspect attempting to prove their innocence. The interrogator must decide whether the prover is sufficiently convincing. There is an imbalance; knowledge-wise the interrogator is in an inferior position.

In complexity theory, the interrogator is the person, with limited computational power, trying to solve the problem. The prover is the new computer, which is assumed to have immense computational power. An interactive proof system is a protocol that the interrogator can use in order to determine, at least with high probability, whether the prover should be believed. By analogy, these are crimes that the police may not be able to solve, but at least innocents can convince the police of their innocence. This is the class IP.

If multiple provers can be interrogated, and the provers are not allowed to coordinate their answers (as is typically the case when the police interrogates multiple suspects), then we get to the class MIP. Such interrogations, via cross examining the provers responses, provide the interrogator with greater power, so MIP contains IP.

Quantum communication is a new form of communication carried out with qubits. Entanglement a quantum feature in which qubits are spookishly entangled, even if separated makes quantum communication fundamentally different to ordinary communication. Allowing the provers of MIP to share an entangled qubit leads to the class MIP*.

It seems obvious that communication between the provers can only serve to help the provers coordinate lies rather than assist the interrogator in discovering truth. For that reason, nobody expected that allowing more communication would make computational problems more reliable and solvable. Surprisingly, we now know that MIP* = RE. This means that quantum communication behaves wildly differently to normal communication.

In the 1970s, Alain Connes formulated what became known as the Connes Embedding Problem. Grossly simplified, this asked whether infinite matrices can be approximated by finite matrices. This new paper has now proved this isnt possible an important finding for pure mathematicians.

In 1993, meanwhile, Boris Tsirelson pinpointed a problem in physics now known as Tsirelsons Problem. This was about two different mathematical formalisms of a single situation in quantum mechanics to date an incredibly successful theory that explains the subatomic world. Being two different descriptions of the same phenomenon it was to be expected that the two formalisms were mathematically equivalent.

But the new paper now shows that they arent. Exactly how they can both still yield the same results and both describe the same physical reality is unknown, but it is why physicists are also suddenly taking an interest.

Time will tell what other unanswered scientific questions will yield to the study of complexity. Undoubtedly, MIP* = RE is a great leap forward.

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Major quantum computational breakthrough is shaking up physics and maths - The Conversation UK

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A time traveler’s guide to the end of the universe – The Next Web

In this series well take a science and technology-based overhead view of the future from the perspective of a time traveler. This edition focuses on what youd see if you traveled far enough into the future to watch the universe end.

So youve decided to visit the end of the universe? Well, bully for you. Some folks might call it a spoiler, but I say we should skip to the end just to see where all of this is going.

Luckily for us Matt Caplan, a theoretical physicist from Illinois State University, recently conducted a study to determine how the end of the universe is likely to go down.

Ill save you some jargon: The universe ends not with a bang, kiss, or even a whimper, but with a Gothic rollicking finale.

As Caplan put it in his research paper:

In the far future long after star formation has ceased the universe will be populated by sparse degenerate remnants, mostly white dwarfs, though their ultimate fate is an open question. These white dwarfs will cool and freeze solid into black dwarfs while pycnonuclear fusion will slowly process their composition to iron-56.

However, due to the declining electron fraction the Chandrasekhar limit of these stars will be decreasing and will eventually be below that of the most massive black dwarfs. As such, isolated dwarf stars with masses greater than 1.2M will collapse in the far future due to the slow accumulation of iron-56 in their cores.

A long, long time from now (think of the number one followed by the word trillion a hundred times, thats how many years) the universes stars will all have either gone supernova or frozen. Those big enough to explode will shower the universe in light. Those too small to go supernova will slowly cool off until they reach ambient temperature.

Some of those cold stars will become a hypothetical kind of mass called a black dwarf. These dont exist yet but, as Michael Irving writes in New Atlas:

Its been calculated that this process would take trillions of years, and since the universe itself is only 13.4 billion years old, scientists dont expect any black dwarfs to exist yet. The oldest known white dwarfs are still shining brightly.

Irving continues:

A black dwarf was basically thought to be the end of the story, but according to Caplan, theres still some life to be found in these objects. Fusion can still occur at very cold temperatures it just takes an incredibly long time and requires some help from quantum mechanics.

In essence, these black dwarfs are just dead stars put out to pasture for eternity. If Caplans wrong about what happens next, the universe would end like The Sopranos did here, if you havent seen it and dont mind the spoiler.

But if Caplans right, it would mean that a small percentage of those dead black dwarf stars would come back to life just long enough to go supernova before everything goes quiet.

Heres how: quantum mechanics allows for weird stuff to happen that defies our laws of physics. Even though the black dwarfs are dead, they still contain all the necessary particles for quantum mechanics to work. Every once in a while, say over a few trillion years, a particle might tunnel (think teleportation) through other particles and have a tiny reaction.

[Read: Quantum physicists say time travelers dont have to worry about the butterfly effect]

Over trillions upon trillions of years these reactions could, as expert Vince Neil puts it kickstart the stars heart. Once the star rises from the dead it would then go supernova and produce the universes final interesting event: A muted Gothic ballet of tiny black supernovas.

Its impossible to know exactly what that would look like and, sadly, theres no guarantee youll get to see it happen no matter how far into the future you travel. By the time the black dwarfs are all thats left, the universe will be cold and dark. Those stars that come back to life will be spread out across what could potentially be an infinite blackness.

So dont be surprised if your trip to the end of the universe is a just a black screen. The good news is, if you wait around long enough you may just catch the next big bang.

Read next: EA renames its subscription service to EA Play

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Students in the news | Announcements – Indiana Gazette

An Indiana native has been named a Fulbright Scholar.

The U.S. Department of State and the J. William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship Board have announced that Dr. Thomas E. Baker, who studies at University de Sherbrooke in Quebec, Canada, has received a Fulbright U.S. Scholar Program award to the United Kingdom.

Baker will research and provide mentorship at the University of York as part of a project to study the exact properties of density functional theory. Density functional theory was discovered in 1964 and has provided a way to simulate the quantum physics of large systems, especially to simulate materials. While density functional theory is proven to be exact, the theory requires approximations to use and approximations can give inaccurate results. Baker seeks to improve the theory by discovering more with modern methods from the broader field of condensed matter physics.

The son of John and Kathy Baker, of Indiana, he is a 2005 graduate of Indiana Area Senior High School.

The Fulbright program is the flagship international educational exchange program sponsored by the U.S. government and is designed to forge lasting connections between the people of the United States and the people of other countries, counter misunderstandings, and help people and nations work together toward common goals. The program was established in 1946.

The following Indiana County-area graduates were recognized as members of the class of 2020 of Edinboro University:

Julie E. Shirley, of Blairsville, who earned a Bachelor of Arts in criminal justice, with honors

Teresa A. Shields, of Clarksburg, who earned a Bachelor of Science in education middle level education, with honors

Makayla Dawn Murray, of Dayton, who earned a Master of Arts in communication studies

Nearly 1,200 students were named to the spring 2020 deans list at Edinboro University. The following Indiana County-area students are among them:

Ashleigh P. Bowman, of Indiana

Julie E. Shirley, of Blairsville

Rachael Duncan, of Blairsville

Teresa A Shields, of Clarksburg

Aubrie R. Putt, of Home

Matthew Anthony Wehrle, of Rossiter

Gabrielle M. LaBovick, of Saltsburg

In order to attain this academic honor, students must maintain a quality-point average of 3.4 or higher, complete a minimum of 12 semester hours of credit and receive no grade lower than a C in any course.

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6 new degrees approved, including graduate degrees in biostatistics and quantum information science: News at IU – IU Newsroom

The Indiana University Board of Trustees has approved six new degrees, four of which are graduate level.

All of the new graduate degrees are on the Bloomington campus:

Also approved were a Bachelor of Arts in theater, film and television at IUPUI and a Bachelor of Science in accounting at IU East.

The master's and doctoral degrees in biostatistics are offered by the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics in the School of Public Health-Bloomington. They will focus on rural public health issues and specialized areas in public health research, such as the opioid epidemic.

Biostatistics is considered a high-demand job field. Both degrees are intended to meet the labor market and educational and research needs of the state, which is trying to reduce negative health outcomes. Biostatisticians typically are hired by state and local health departments, federal government agencies, medical centers, medical device companies and pharmaceutical companies, among others.

The Master of Science in quantum information science will involve an intensive, one-year, multidisciplinary program with tracks that tie into physics, chemistry, mathematics, computer science, engineering and business. It's offered through the Office of Multidisciplinary Graduate Programs in the University Graduate School. The degree was proposed by the College of Arts and Sciences, the Luddy School of Informatics, Computing and Engineering, and the Kelley School of Business.

Most of the faculty who will teach the classes are members of the newly established IU Quantum Science and Engineering Center.

Students who earn the Master of Science in quantum information science can pursue careers with computer and software companies that are active with quantum computation, and national labs involved in quantum information science, among other opportunities.

The Master of International Affairs is a joint degree by the O'Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs and the Hamilton-Lugar School of Global and International Studies. The degree is the first of its kind offered by any IU campus and meets student demand for professional master's programs having an international focus.

Featured components of the degree include the study of international relations and public administration. Graduates can expect to find employment in the federal government, such as the Department of State, the Department of Treasury or the U.S. intelligence community, or with private-sector firms in fields such as high-tech, global trade and finance.

The Bachelor of Arts in theater, film and television combines existing programs and provides them a more visible home in the School of Liberal Arts at IUPUI. The degree features three distinct concentrations:

Applied theater is a growing field that emphasizes and works with organizations around issues of social justice, social change, diversity and inclusion.

IU East's Bachelor of Science in accounting degree, offered through the School of Business and Economics, helps meet projected high demand in the accounting industry. It also will prepare students to take the certified public accountant or certified managerial accountant exams, or enter graduate programs in accounting or business.

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6 new degrees approved, including graduate degrees in biostatistics and quantum information science: News at IU - IU Newsroom

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Chess.com Signs Esports Talent Agency Rumble Gaming to Enhance Sponsorship, Broadcast Strategy – TEO – The Esports Observer

Online chess platform Chess.com has partnered with Rumble Gaming as the company looks to further its push into the esports space. Rumble Gaming will work with Chess.com to develop a holistic approach to activating brands within its competition products.

Historically, chess competitions have been segmented into distinct brands based on ruleset, participants, etc. Chess.com Director of Business Development Nick Barton told The Esports Observer that the platform is now looking to bring these distinct competitions together under a more unified heading. All of chess broadcast content will fall under what we consider the esports and gaming arena, he said. There isnt going to be a distinction in the way the content is presented to the viewer.

This holistic approach is part of what made the partnership with Rumble Gaming attractive to Chess.com. Where Rumble comes in is that they share this view with us packaging even traditional properties as esports viewing experiences.

Chess surged in popularity on Twitch earlier this year when Chess.com held its first streamer tournament, Pogchamps, which helped the chess category reach 12.5M hours watched during June. That viewership growth has also translated into new users for the platform, which has added more than 1M new members in the last month according to a release.

With chess growing in awareness and engagement among a younger, digitally native audience, Chess.com is looking to harness that momentum and capitalize on its ties to the esports industry, leveraging the experience and connections of Rumble Gaming to do so. We want chess to be in the discussion when marketing managers and agencies are looking for esports activations this can be online chess of any type, Barton said.

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Chess.com Signs Esports Talent Agency Rumble Gaming to Enhance Sponsorship, Broadcast Strategy - TEO - The Esports Observer

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Did Lincoln Riley respond to Texas landing QB Quinn Ewers with chess tweet? – Larry Brown Sports

The Texas Longhorns landed a big recruit on Friday, and Lincoln Riley appeared to issue a response on Twitter.

2022 quarterback recruit Quinn Ewers announced on Twitter Friday that he was committing to the Texas Longhorns.

Ewers is the No. 1 recruit in the 2022 class, according to 247 Sports and ESPN, so that was a huge get for Tom Hermans program. Ewers chose Texas over rival Oklahoma, among other programs, which may have led to a response from Riley.

The Oklahoma Sooners head coach tweeted an emoji of a chess piece on Friday night.

That may be Rileys way of saying hes playing chess, not checkers. If so, he probably has some sort of corresponding moves ready to go.

In addition to having Spencer Rattler and Tanner Mordecai competing at quarterback this year, Oklahoma landed a big commitment from 2021 quarterback Caleb Williams last month. They may not have landed Ewers, but they still should be well set at the quarterback position.

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Young to launch National Online Blitz chess championships – manilastandard.net

Chess aficionados will have a chance to display their chess skills when the 1st Red Cedar National Online Blitz chess championships gets going on August 20, Thursday 12:30 pm at lichess.org.Tournament organizer and Till I Met You (TIMY) group founder International Master Angelo Abundo Young said the one-day, free registration event is sponsored by Captain Elmer Cruz, CE Ben Piramide, 4/0 Richard Belarmino, Angel Nikko Nieves,US master Florentino Inumerable, AGM Anji Camer, Falco Family, Rajacatur, Johnny Teves, Dr. Fred Paez and Atty. Cliburn Anthony Orbe.Cash prizes await the winners with the champion receiving P1,000 while the next two placers will take home P500 and P300, respectively. Category prizes for the top PECA executive, senior, lady, frontliner and juniors are up for grabs. "We (TIMY) will do more online chess tournaments," said eight-time and 2011 Illinois State chess champion Young, who organized the event alongside multi-titled Philippine executive champion Dr. Jenny Mayor.

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