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Bruno Fernandes staying means Manchester United face all kinds of trade-offs | Jonathan Liew

Signing Matheus Cunha and Bryan Mbeumo are leaps of faith, as is hoping Ruben Amorim can solve all the problems

In publicly rejecting the overtures of the Saudi Pro League, Bruno Fernandes has made it clear he wants to continue playing football at the highest level. That he wants to challenge for trophies. That he has no interest in wasting what remains of his peak years jogging around aimlessly in the service of a vast public relations project, providing lucrative content for a cruel and heartless regime. Despite all this, he’s more than happy to remain at Manchester United for now.

There were other angles to this decision. In a sense, Al-Hilal’s courtship of Fernandes represented a kind of catch-22 for United, desperate to reinforce their underperforming squad while remaining compliant with profitability and sustainability rules. Only a player who truly loved United could contemplate leaving in order to help balance the books. But in signalling his willingness to leave, Fernandes merely demonstrated why United could not possibly let him go.

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© Photograph: Ash Donelon/Manchester United/Getty Images

© Photograph: Ash Donelon/Manchester United/Getty Images

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Thomas Tuchel tears into lacklustre England: ‘I didn’t like the attitude’

  • Kane’s goal secures 1-0 win over minnows Andorra

  • ‘We lacked seriousness. I didn’t like the body language’

Thomas Tuchel admitted England had “played with fire” in their 1-0 win over Andorra, risking the concession of an equaliser and a draw that would have registered as perhaps their greatest humiliation since defeat to the USA in 1950. “I felt it was like a cup game where the favourites don’t see the danger,” he said.

England won thanks to Harry Kane’s 50th-minute goal, leaving them top of the group on nine points without having conceded a goal. No previous England manager has ever begun with three successive victories to nil, but Tuchel was clearly very unhappy with the performance.

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© Photograph: Europa Press Sports/Europa Press/Getty Images

© Photograph: Europa Press Sports/Europa Press/Getty Images

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Bilbao was a glorious blip for Spurs – and that’s why Levy had to sack Postecoglou | Jonathan Wilson

Tottenham chair was not blinded by silverware and decided finishing fourth-bottom of the Premier League was not enough

In football, there is always a lot of light and noise. There is always a lot of emotion. That is both its appeal and why it is so difficult for those in the game to make decisions. Ange Postecoglou gave Tottenham one of the great nights in the club’s history when they won the Europa League in Bilbao.

A first trophy in 17 years. A first European trophy in 41. It’s easy to understand why the instinct is gratitude, to hope that somehow victory can be self-replicating, that silverware begets silverware and something fundamental in Tottenham’s being was transformed at San Mamés.

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© Composite: Getty, AP

© Composite: Getty, AP

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England were dismal against minnows Andorra but it really doesn’t matter | Jonathan Wilson

Tuchel’s target is to win the World Cup and a scintillating performance would not have made lifting the prize in New Jersey any more likely

How bad was it? Bad enough to be England’s worst result in seven games against Andorra. Bad enough for players used to operating at the highest of levels for the best clubs in the world to find themselves unable to weight simple passes or deliver crosses with precision. Bad enough that Andorra’s 37-year-old left-back Marc García nutmegged Noni Madueke in injury time. But, beyond the potential problems it may cause with goal difference, it doesn’t matter at all in terms of the main issue: the winning of the World Cup next summer.

England could have played scintillating football and beaten Andorra 10-0 and it wouldn’t have made them any more likely to be lifting the prize in New Jersey next July. That’s not to excuse a dismal performance, just to say it’s irrelevant. The game was won, the box ticked, and Thomas Tuchel hopefully learned something from the training sessions.

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© Photograph: Albert Gea/Action Images/Reuters

© Photograph: Albert Gea/Action Images/Reuters

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Missing in the Amazon: the disappearance – episode 1

Three years ago the British journalist Dom Phillips and the Brazilian Indigenous defender Bruno Pereira vanished while on a reporting trip near Brazil’s remote Javari valley. The Guardian’s Latin America correspondent Tom Phillips investigates what happened in the first episode of a new six-part investigative podcast series. Find episode 2 – and all future episodes – by searching for ‘Missing in the Amazon’

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© Composite: Guardian Audio

© Composite: Guardian Audio

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Musk and Trump are enemies made for each other – united in their ability to trash their own brands | Jonathan Freedland

What one did to Twitter and Tesla, the other is doing to the United States of America. Their feud is revealing a fatal flaw in the Maga project

The scriptwriters of Trump: the Soap Opera are slipping. The latest plot development – the epic falling-out between the title character and his best buddy, Elon Musk – was so predictable, and indeed predicted, that it counts as the opposite of a twist. Still, surprise can be overrated. Watching the two men – one the richest in the world, the other the most powerful – turn on each other in a series of ever-more venomous posts on their respective social media platforms has been entertainment of the highest order. X v Truth: it could be a Marvel blockbuster.

But this is more than mere popcorn fodder. Even if they eventually patch things up, the rift between the president and Musk has exposed a divide inside the contemporary right, in the US and beyond – and a fatal flaw of the Trump project.

Jonathan Freedland is a Guardian columnist

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

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© Photograph: Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images

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Océans en danger : les scientifiques en première ligne

Un "cadre d’action pour garantir que la science reste au coeur des efforts visant à assurer un avenir durable aux océans et à l’humanité". C’est la principale doléance de la communauté scientifique, réunie à Nice à l’occasion de la Conférence des Nations unies sur l’océan.

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Episode two: the journalist and the president

What took British journalist Dom Phillips from the club nights of the UK dance scene as editor of MixMag to one of the most remote, and dangerous, corners of the Amazon rainforest? In 2022, Dom set off on a reporting trip with Bruno Pereira, a Brazilian expert on uncontacted tribes, into the Javari valley, to investigate the criminal gangs threatening this region. And then they vanished

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© Composite: Guardian Audio

© Composite: Guardian Audio

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Sortie du gestionnaire d'archives PeaZip 10.4.0

PeaZip n'a jamais été abordé dans ces colonnes jusqu'à présent, alors qu'il fait partie des outils multi-plateformes permettant une transition en douceur vers le libre. Il a presque dix ans. Sortie le 14 avril, la version 10.4 continue la série 10.0 commencée en octobre 2024.

PeaZip Linux thème sombre sous Wayland
PeaZip affiché avec son thème sombre dans Wayland

Giogio Tani, le développeur de PeaZip publie plusieurs versions chaque année. Le logiciel évolue par petites touches largement testées via les fonctions "expérimentales" des versions précédentes.

icone de PeaZip

Je trouve beaucoup d'atouts à PeaZip

Il est libre, multi-plateformes, multi-architecture, portable (nomade), écrit en FreePascal avec Lazarus, ouvre et écrit plusieurs formats d'archives. Il est rapide et assez léger pour un tout-en-un (11,2 MB). Il est bien maintenu, l'auteur est transparent sur la sécurité, documentation et tutoriels sont conséquents et pédagogiques. L'interface est travaillée, sobre, ergonomique, thémable, configurable, jolie, … N'en jetez plus ! Ah si encore : il est dispo en Gtk et Qt sous X11 et Wayland, et l'auteur l'empaquête à tout va.

C'est un humble logiciel très bien foutu, très travaillé, utile pour installer des outils libres sur les systèmes proprios afin de les amener en douceur vers Linux ou *BSD (il ne fonctionne pas encore sous Haïku).

Architectures et systèmes

  • Linux x86_64, x86, ARM, aarch64 ;
  • Windows, ReactOS, Wine ;
  • Darwin, macOS Intel et aarch64 (Apple Silicon), la famille BSD.

PeaZip propose des fonctions peu courantes

  • Le moteur de scriptage intégré permet de convertir vos opérations graphiques pour les automatiser et les étendre avec des options en ligne de commande ;
  • un chiffrement solide est disponible, avec authentification à double facteur ;
  • l'interface graphique est unifiée sur tous les systèmes et architectures pris en charge, même pour les formats moins courant (zpaq, brotli, zstandard) ;
  • le gestionnaire de fichiers avancé facilite, par exemple, la vérification des sommes de contrôles, la déduplication, la conversion de formats d'archives, la recherche, etc ;
  • c'est un outil portable et nomade qu'on peut copier sur une clé usb, sur le net ou partager en réseau sans l'installer ;
  • PeaZip dispose d'une transparence et des options de suivi pour la vie privée et la sécurité.

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