I was wondering if anyone was (or knows of someone) creating custom mods to get around this annoying licencing issue so you could use f1 livery's logo's names etc. I used to play a lot of Football manager and people have made who packs to do this and it makes the game a lot better, appreciated I've not actually started playing the game yet (downloading as we speak) just thought would be cool to have that choice/option
I was wondering if anyone was (or knows of someone) creating custom mods to get around this annoying licencing issue so you could use f1 livery's logo's names etc. I used to play a lot of Football manager and people have made who packs to do this and it makes the game a lot better, appreciated I've not actually started playing the game yet (downloading as we speak) just thought would be cool to have that choice/option
There will be a future update coming soon with the ability to change livery's etc.. So future mods etc will be coming soon as well.
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In Argentina, a crew of scientists excavated the fossil of a dinosaur with arms comparable to T. rex's miniature limbs.
Why it matters
This adds evidence to the theory that mini dinosaur limbs weren't useless. They may have had some sort of evolutionary advantage.
Despite its colossal skull, towering height and carnivorous appetite, Tyrannosaurus rex gets the unfortunate honor of being a punchline due to one hard-to-miss quirk. "Catch me if you can with your silly little arms, T. rex," says a 10-year-old watching a dino documentary somewhere, probably.
But thanks to new research published Thursday in the journal Current Biology, we may finally have justice for T. rex's teeny tiny arms. Not only did scientists excavate the fossil of yet another massive, meat-eating dinosaur with mini-upper limbs -- called Meraxes gigas -- but they also consider it to be evidence that small dinosaur arms actually had an important survival advantage long ago.
The study team transports the fossil in a plaster jacket.
Apesteguía
"I'm convinced that those proportionally tiny arms had some sort of function," Juan Canale, project lead at Ernesto Bachmann Paleontological Museum in Argentina, said in a statement. "The skeleton shows large muscle insertions and fully developed pectoral girdles, so the [arms] had strong muscles. This means that the arms did not shrink because they were useless to the dinosaurs."
However, as Canale puts it, "the harder question is what exactly the functions were."
New dino specs Upon analyzing the new fossil, located in the present-day northern Patagonia region of the southern tip of South America, the recovery team concocted a visual image of what M. gigas might have looked like billions of years ago. "The fossil has a lot of novel information, and it is in superb shape," Canale said.
To name a few of its traits, this enormous dinosaur was probably about 45 years old at its time of death, about 11 meters (36 feet) long and more than 4 tons. And it had a rather majestic facade.
This is what M. gigas' head probably looked like.
Jorge A. Gonzalez
The researchers found fossilized proof that this iteration of M. gigas held a skull decorated with crests, furrows, bumps and small hornlets, which Canale suggests showed up as the reptile went through adolescence and solidified once it became an adult. Possibly, these markings were used to attract potential mates.
"Sexual selection is a powerful evolutionary force," Canale said. "But given that we cannot directly observe their behavior, it is impossible to be certain about this."
The excavation site in Argentina where the M. Gigas fossil was found.
Juan I. Canale
All things considered, M. gigas looks quite a bit like T. rex, even though it descends from a totally separate dinosaur classification called -- prepare for a mouthful -- Carcharodontosauridae. And this brings us to perhaps the most striking part of the team's finding.
M. gigas and T. rex never, ever interacted with each other. We can be sure of that because M. gigas became extinct 20 million years before T. rex even walked the Earth.
Thus, the two dinos must have developed their unique limbs independently, which underscores the theory that their miniature arms had a special purpose. Evolutionary advantages tend to turn up at different points in history because they have benefits that permeate species across timelines.
Though it's still speculation, some ideas Canale has for the scaled-down arm trait are these dinosaurs "may have used the arms for reproductive behavior, such as holding the female during mating, or [to] support themselves to stand back up after a break or a fall." In other words, maybe it was easier for T. rex or M. gigas to embrace their mates with a petite upper frame or swiftly push themselves off the ground after face-planting.
For strategic movements, bigger isn't always better.
Going forward, the researchers hope to continue studying the skeleton of M. gigas to get to the bottom of the small arm saga. And even further down the line, the fossil could help solve many other outstanding paleontological mysteries. "We found the perfect spot on the first day of searching, and M. gigas was found," Canale said. "It was probably one of the most exciting points of my career."
MONTREAL (AP) - Wayne Rooney´s D.C. United was assured of finishing with the fewest points in Major League Soccer after Montreal took advantage of an own goal in a 1-0 win on Saturday night.
Rooney, a former Manchester United and England great, took over as coach in July from Hernán Losada. D.C. (7-20-6) has 27 points and is 14th and last in the Eastern Conference with one game remaining, against visiting Cincinnati on Oct. 9.
Donovan Pines deflected Zachary Brault-Guillard's cross past goalkeeper David Ochoa in the 41st minute.
Montreal's James Pantemis had two saves.
Montreal (19-9-5), which already had clinched a playoff berth, closes the regular season Oct.
9 at home against Inter Miami (7-20-6).
___
The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.
More than 8,000 people in the Philippines have been evacuated from their homes as the islands are battered by a Typhoon bringing with it 120mph winds and torrential rain that is toppling trees, ripping up power lines and laying the country to waste.
Typhoon Noru barrelled through the archipelago's heavily populated main island of Luzon after an 'explosive intensification', the state weather forecaster said.
Nearly 8,400 people have been pre-emptively evacuated from Noru's path, with winds toppling trees, taking out power lines and causing up to three-metre high storm surges.
The category 3 tropical storm's maximum sustained winds have been recorded as 121mph after making landfall, the state weather agency said.
Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos declared a suspension of government work and school classes for Monday as the category 3 tropical storm continues to wreak havoc.
Rescuers run as they check residents living at the seaside slum district of Tondo while Typhoon Noru approaches Manila, the capital of the Philippines, today
Residents carry their children as they evacuate to safer grounds to prepare for the coming of Typhoon Noru at the seaside slum district of Tondo in Manila
Residents prepare to return to their homes after volunteers and local officials reminded the neighbourhood to evacuate
A young family takes shelter at an evacuation centre in Manila, in preparation for the Super Typhoo
Noru, the strongest storm to hit the Philippines this year, made landfall in the northeast, on the Burdeos municipality on the Polillo islands, part of Quezon province, at 5.30pm local time, 9.30am GMT.
It made landfall about 100 kilometres northeast of the capital, Manila, and emergency personnel braced for the possibility of strong winds and heavy rain battering the city, home to more than 13 million people.
The weather bureau issued warnings late on Sunday night for 'serious flooding' in vulnerable areas of Manila and nearby provinces as Noru dumped heavy rain.
'We ask residents living in danger zones to adhere to calls for evacuation whenever necessary,' Philippine National Police chief General Rodolfo Azurin said.
Forced evacuations have been underway in some high-risk areas of the capital, including impoverished communities living in flimsy shacks along rivers and near the sea.
Pictured: Evacuees rest inside a gymnasium turned into a temporary evacuation center in Manila
A family with their belongings arrive at an evacuation centre in Quezon city.
Families have fled their homes with often very few belongings to take shelter in safer communal buildings
Families have fled their homes with often very few belongings to take shelter in safer communal buildings.
Residents in Tondo, a slum district of Manila which is on the seafront, were pictured carrying their children as they evacuated to safer grounds before the storm hit.
Gloria Perez, 68, was part of a group sheltering in modular tents set up on a covered basketball court.
'I evacuated the house where I'm living in because I'm scared, the flood there gets really high,' Perez said.
'I don't want a repeat of what happened to me before.'
A village officer talks to residents near a creek in Quezon city. Forced evacuations have been underway in some high-risk areas of the capital
'The winds were fierce this morning,' said Ernesto Portillo, 30, who works as a cook in the coastal municipality of Infanta in Quezon.
'We're a bit worried...
We secured our belongings and bought a few groceries so we have food just in case.'
Noru, known locally in the Phillipines as Typhoon Karding, is expected to enter the South China Sea on Monday and head towards Vietnam.
'Typhoons are like engines - you need a fuel and an exhaust to function,' said weather forecaster Robb Gile.
A young family taking shelter in a modular tent at an evacuation centre in Baseco, Manila as Typhoon Noru approached the Philippines
Residents speaking to a village officer outside their homes, with one taking shelter from the downpours with an umbrella
A man carries bags of food while another reinforces their roof as they prepare for the coming of Typhoon Noru in Manila
'In the case of Karding, it has a good fuel because it has plenty of warm waters along its track and then there is a good exhaust in the upper level of the atmosphere - so it's a good recipe for explosive intensification,' he added, using the local name for the storm.
Noru comes nine months after another super typhoon devastated swathes of the country, which killed more than 400 people and left hundreds of thousands homeless.
Damaged tree branches lie on the ground during heavy rainfall in Polillo, Quezon Province. The storm could do longer-term damage by taking down coconut and mango trees and causing 'severe losses' to rice and corn crops in the heavily agricultural region
Waves crashes into road on coastline during heavy storm in Polillo, Quezon Province.
The weather bureau warned of dangerous storm surges more than three metres high along the coast of Aurora and Quezon
'People living near the coast have been told to evacuate. We live away from the coast so we're staying put so far. We're more worried about the water from the mountains,' said Rhea Tan, 54, a restaurant manager in Dingalan.
The weather bureau warned of dangerous storm surges more than three metres high along the coast of Aurora and Quezon, including the Polillo islands, along with widespread flooding and landslides as the storm soaks the region.
The storm could do longer-term damage by taking down coconut and mango trees and causing 'severe losses' to rice and corn crops in the heavily agricultural region, with videos showing high winds toppling huge trees.
A satellite image released by NASA on Saturday shows Typhoon Noru approaching the Philippines
The coast guard reported more than 2,500 people had been left stranded by ferry cancellations as vessels took shelter ahead of the storm.
Dozens of flights in and out of Manila have also been cancelled.
The Philippines - ranked among the most vulnerable nations to the impacts of climate change - is hit by an average of 20 storms every year.
In 2013, Typhoon Haiyan, one of the most powerful tropical cyclones ever recorded, killed 6,300 people.