If you want to get the popular streaming service for sports cheaper, you can still benefit from a strong offer at DAZN. There is a service for new customers and returnees for only 19.99 euros per monthwhen you treat yourself to the annual pack deal. Still available in November!
Compared to the normal DAZN prices, this makes an advantage of 5 euros per month for the annual package and 10 euros for the monthly package. So it doesn’t matter which viewing angle, you can save a lot.
- ✓ Experience Bundesliga & UEFA Champions League and much more
- ✓ Enjoy the best live sport for a year and save €120.00
- ✓ Pay €19.99/month instead of €29.99/month
- ✓ Stream DAZN on one device at the same time
- ✓ Applies to new customers and returnees
Duration of the campaign: We still have no data on this.
Links with a * are affiliate links. If you buy a product from a partner, we receive a commission. The price for you remains unaffected.
Founder and acting boss of SmartDroid.de, blogs here and only here since 2008. All inquiries to me, in the comments or via the linked networks.
More from Denny Fischer
The Fed raised, as expected, its key rate by 0.75 percentage points on Wednesday, bringing it to a range between 3.75% and 4%, the highest in nearly 15 years.
In the statement announcing the decision, the Fed’s Monetary Policy Committee said that in determining the path of rates, it would “take into account the cumulative effect of the monetary tightening” already carried out on economic activity.
Chute de Dow Jones
This mention “sent to the markets the signal that the Federal Reserve would be very cautious following the next two rate hikes”, explained Tom Cahill, of Ventura Wealth Management.
“But the (Chairman Jerome Powell’s) press conference that followed reaffirmed that the Fed still had some way to go…and that it was premature to talk regarding a pause in rate hikes, and it drove the market down,” he added. In the red before the Fed’s announcements, the Dow Jones thus took up 1.28%, before falling.
Fed warning
“Inflation is proving to be a tough opponent to beat and the Fed has warned once morest overly optimistic expectations of a return to more accommodative monetary policy,” said Susannah Streeter of Hargreaves Lansdown.
Traders now estimate more than 70% the probability that the Fed rate will rise above 5% by next May, a scenario that he did not even envisage a month ago.
After easing, bond rates bounced back to stand higher than their level the day before. The yield on 10-year US government bonds stood at 4.08%, once morest 4.04% the day before.
Apple and Amazon affected
Unsurprisingly, the prospect of higher rates for longer has chilled the tech sector, which is highly dependent on the cost of cash to fund its growth.
Apple (-3.73%), Microsoft (3.54%), Alphabet (-3.79%), Tesla (-5.64%) and Amazon (-4.82%) all took a shine, this latest descending even to its lowest level since March 2020, in the early days of the pandemic.
The movement affected Airbnb (-13.43% to 94.41 dollars), despite the publication of a turnover and a net profit above expectations.
The platform predicts a slight slowdown in booking growth for the last quarter of the year, compared to the July-September period.
afp/hkr
This morning, Paul El Kharrat was the guest of Jean-Marc Morandini in “Morandini Live” on CNews. The young man, autistic asperger, has just published a book entitled “Welcome to my world” (ed. Harpercollins). “I’m not sick. It’s different neurological connections. A different way of acting and thinking (…) I have a way of looking at things that is extremely different from what most people may think “, he began.
And to add: “Being in this world, being so different, not thinking like many people… It’s being in this situation that makes me sick. J I would like to forget, not to think regarding things that hurt me, that make me suffer”. Paul El Kharrat clarified that he can be “very nervous” and have “hysterics”.
“I’m on antibiotics because I’m a very moody person, I’m moody. It stabilizes me a lot. It calms me down. I’m someone who likes solitude but is sociable,” he said. pursued before evoking death. “I feel my heart rate accelerating, I visualize death at every moment, even in my dreams. I see her staring at me,” said the young man.
Before continuing: “It feels like I’m closer to a near death than to a fulfilled life. I’m young but I feel like I’m three times my age. It happened to me several times to wait for death”. “Life is difficult. It’s so hard. It’s so painful to exist in a world where man is a wolf to man. We come into the world, we have to fight to survive”, concluded Paul El Kharrat once morest Jean-Marc Morandini in this interview (see video above).
.
.
Electrification of rural areas: a plausible energy transition?
In its energy policy, which aims to generalize access to electricity in rural areas, the government has announced that it wants to favor the use of renewable energies. A bold initiative that still raises some questions. Does Morocco have the potential required to achieve this energy transition? And what regarding climate change? Badr Ikken delivers his expert opinion!
The actions initiated in terms of energy transition are, a priori, a good omen, but you still need to have the stuff to achieve it. To the question relating to Morocco’s potential in the field, Badr Ikken, former director of the Institute for Research in Solar Energy and New Energies (IRESEN) answers the Inspirations ECO: “Our country has considerable energy potential, in particular solar and wind. The technical potential for solar exceeds 49,000 TWh and for wind 11,500 TWh”. He adds that the “reservoir” available to Morocco is not only sufficient to meet its energy needs but might be enhanced through the export of electricity or green hydrogen produced from clean electricity. What, according to him, “contribute to the decarbonization of European countries and co-finance our energy transition”. Another asset mentioned by Ikken, “dedicated training and research centers, firms and companies specializing in the development, engineering and implementation of renewable projects with a critical mass of experts and engineers” , enjoyed by the country. Without forgetting, “a mobilized banking sector”. For him, “the national ecosystem only lacks a consolidation of the industrial sector in order to take full advantage of this dynamic and ensure our energy dependence with “made in Morocco” equipment”. On another aspect, Badr Ikken argues that renewable energies are competitive with other energies: “even excluding the economic situation and the surge in fossil fuels, renewable energies are less expensive today. The price of solar photovoltaic has gone from 3 DH per kilowatt (kWh) 15 years ago to less than 30 cents today. Wind power, on the other hand, also reaches similar costs. Their use is no longer determined solely by climatic considerations but also by a real economic opportunity”.
On climate change, Badr Ikken has his own idea. He thinks that “renewable energies are equal and complementary”. The carbon footprint, generated by the manufacture and operation of wind power, is 16 g/kWh, and for solar photovoltaic, 25 g/kWh. Which seems “derisory” for him, compared to natural gas (443 g / kWh), oil (840 g / kWh) or coal (more than 1,000 g / kWh).
In short, the former CEO of IRESEN notes that their use depends on local climatic conditions and applications. Photovoltaic solar works only during the day but it is very practical because it allows the development of large capacity projects. It also adapts perfectly to decentralized installations (residential, solar pumping, etc.). Wind power, on the other hand, allows clean energy production, even at night or during periods of bad weather. “’Low-temperature solar thermal allows the heating of domestic water or industrial processes through concentrated solar thermal (CSP).
The latter, installed in Ouarzazate, allows low-cost thermal storage, and should rather evolve in industrial processes such as drying, steam or cold production because the energy can be exploited directly without having to transform it into electricity. through turbines. The potential of hydraulics and biomass remains more limited in Morocco”, he continues.
As for the constraints that might remain, the executive chairman of Gi3 is rather worried: “In my humble opinion, the only constraints relate to the regulatory framework as well as the slowness of the adoption of legal texts and their implementation. . It took several years to operationalize the medium voltage law. The energy crisis requires accelerating processes in order to exploit our renewable potential as quickly as possible and reduce dependence.
“The state must prepare a conducive environment”
Badr Ikken recalls that the National Electricity and Drinking Water Office (ONEE) launched the rural electrification program and was able to electrify more than 1,750 villages comprising 42,838 households by interconnected network with more than 3,500 schools, 130 dispensaries and 1,385 mosques. Demand has increased today, prices have fallen and technologies have evolved significantly. They now make it possible to store energy and interconnect installations in the context of micro-grids and smart grids. “The State must prepare the environment conducive to the development of projects and encourage the Moroccan private sector to develop them. It is now capable of providing financing, operation, maintenance and covering all the links in the value chain. With the right model, we will be able to encourage the creation of businesses and jobs distributed throughout the national territory”.
Kenza Aziouzi / ECO Inspirations