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2361 Interesting News

  • Armies are re-learning how to fight in cities
  • The best dataset on American health care will be harder to access
  • "The Harder They Fall" offers a new take on the Old West
  • Best Cooling Mattress of 2024 - CNET
  • Western multinationals' Russian dilemmas
  • Robert Badinter persuaded France to abolish the guillotine
  • A toast to the possible end of Chinese tariffs on Australian wine
  • Why do the Japanese love CDs?
  • The world's population has reached 8bn. Don't panic
  • Chinese EV-makers are leaving Western rivals in the dust
  • Benjamin Zephaniah stayed angry all his life
  • KAL's cartoon
  • The world's deadliest war last year wasn't in Ukraine
  • Can whisky conquer Chinese palates?
  • How scared is China of Donald Trump's return?
  • Ecuador Is Literally Powerless in the Face of Drought
  • Is the most powerful teachers union in America overreaching?
  • The Same Old Sex Talk Isn't Enough
  • Is your rent ever going to fall?
  • Gustavo Petro, Colombia's left-wing president, is floundering
  • Drs-Malware-Scan - Perform File-Based Malware Scan On Your On-Prem Servers With AWS
  • Ultra-Orthodox Israelis' refusal to fight is a growing problem for Netanyahu
  • Examining the fluff that frustrates northern China
  • Russia's economy once again defies the doomsayers
  • Some Labradors have a predisposition to obesity
  • Japan lands on the Moon
  • The fake news divide: how Modi's rule is fracturing India – video
  • China's young people are rushing to buy gold
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Uranium prices are soaring. Investors should be careful
  • Old Lesbians: reclaiming old age and queerness through storytelling
  • Do Aurora-Causing Solar Storms Mess with Migrating Wildlife?
  • As the Euro-elections loom, Giorgia Meloni guards her right flank
  • How the Pentagon Learned to Use Targeted Ads to Find Its Targets—and Vladimir Putin
  • Locust-busting is getting an upgrade
  • Canadians are starting to sour on migration
  • America's realtor racket is alive and kicking
  • Google's AI Overviews Will Always Be Broken. That's How AI Works
  • Only the Hardiest Trees Can Survive Today's Urban Inferno
  • A trailblazing feminist says Mexico's 'triumph' of a first female president is no surprise
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Google Plans $2 Billion for Malaysia Data Center, Cloud Services
  • How the Iraq war bent America's army out of shape
  • Ukraine is in a race against time to fortify its front line
  • Hebe de Bonafini lived through the lives of her sons
  • A $400,000 delivery of Playdates were (briefly) stolen
  • The Auroras Should Be Spectacular This Summer, Thanks to Solar Maximum
  • There are risks but also big potential benefits from digital payments
  • The 2023 crony-capitalism index
  • The side-effects of the TikTok tussle
  • Opinion: It's a bird, it's a plane, no, it's trash and tunes in the air
  • Trees alone will not save the world
  • Many mental-health conditions have bodily triggers
  • The death of the president changes the power dynamic in Iran
  • The Economist's science and technology internship
  • Business
  • When is a non-alcoholic drink alcohol-free?
  • It is dangerously easy to hack the world's phones
  • China's defence chief repeats threat of force against Taiwanese independence
  • Pandemic aid for schools is ending soon. Many after-school programs may go with it
  • Don't be fooled by America's "new" supply chains
  • BadExclusionsNWBO - An Evolution From BadExclusions To Identify Folder Custom Or Undocumented Exclusions On AV/EDR
  • At long last, Europe's economy is starting to grow
  • American Airlines Admits Business Travel Misfire; Shares Drop
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Lenovo Expands Mideast Ties With $2 Billion Convertible Bond, Saudi Fund Deal
  • Think Tesla is in trouble? Pity even more its wannabe EV rivals
  • Will China's ties with Israel survive the Gaza war?
  • Hopes for a truce in Gaza give way to fears of a long stalemate
  • Arts Calendar: Happenings for the Week of June 2
  • Boston Beer in Talks to Sell Itself to Jim Beam Owner Suntory
  • The BRICS bloc is riven with tensions
  • 'ThreadsDeck' arrived just in time for the Trump verdict
  • Ecuador Is Literally Powerless in the Face of Drought
  • You May Need an iPhone 15 Pro or Better to Take Advantage of iOS 18's AI Features
  • Indian Voters Are Being Bombarded With Millions of Deepfakes. Political Candidates Approve
  • KAL's cartoon
  • How South Africa has changed 30 years after apartheid
  • The Economist's glass-ceiling index
  • The WIRED Guide to Commercial Human Space Flight
  • Why so many Chinese graduates cannot find work
  • Netflix's 3 Body Problem Will Be a 3-Season Series
  • The Taiwanese civilians training for a Chinese invasion – video
  • Mexico's mighty diaspora punches below its weight in elections
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Biden's challenge runs deeper than 'bad vibes'
  • Paul Alexander lived longer than anyone in an iron lung
  • The notable obituaries of 2023
  • How crises reshaped the world financial system
  • For 50 years the story of oil has been one of matching supply with increasing demand
  • The last scraps of the Haitian state are evaporating
  • Few countries are better placed than Vietnam to get rich
  • This week's covers
  • Why France has made abortion a constitutional right
  • Europe can't decide how to unplug from China
  • Highlights of a year when art mattered as much as ever
  • Shrinking populations mean less growth and a more fractious world
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Bernardo Arévalo is still battling to become Guatemala's president
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Ukraine's desperate draft-dodgers drown in the river of death
  • Discounting is back in fashion, as Americans get tired of paying more
  • Congress tells China: sell TikTok or we'll ban it
  • The future of philanthropy will involve a mix of different approaches
  • Politics
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Half of Northern Irish patients wait over a year for treatment
  • Google Explains Why It Suggested Adding Glue to Your Pizza
  • Europe's new-look winter: floods, high sea levels and melting glaciers
  • An American rocket has a fine debut; not so the Moon lander on board
  • How ransomware could cripple countries, not just companies
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • States are becoming more brazen about killing foes abroad
  • Industries may be ready for humanoid robots, but are the robots ready for them?
  • Why any estimate of the cost of climate change will be flawed
  • Vladimir Putin begins Operation Blame Ukraine
  • By 2100 half the world's children will be born in sub-Saharan Africa
  • South Korea Unveils $19 Billion Package for Chip Industry
  • Frontline Formosa
  • The Biden administration is trying to walk a fine line in arming Israel
  • Jacqueline Gold freed women to shamelessly enjoy themselves
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Carbon-dioxide-removal options are multiplying
  • To save the Amazon, Lula must work out who owns it
  • ANC weighs coalition options after crushing South Africa election blow
  • Must we pity put-upon parents sacrificing all to send their offspring to private school? | Catherine Bennett
  • This week's cover
  • How to trade an election
  • A growing number of Britons are on disability benefits
  • This week's covers
  • How geopolitical tensions could disrupt the global car industry
  • Africa's tiger economy is shot
  • Week in wildlife – in pictures: playful baby lemurs, kingfisher tug-of-war and a beautiful bee-eater
  • Teslas Can Still Be Stolen With a Cheap Radio Hack—Despite New Keyless Tech
  • The age of the unicorn is over
  • GiveDirectly does what it says on the tin
  • A Leak of Biometric Police Data Is a Sign of Things to Come
  • Chinese weapons are taking over in Africa
  • Blighty newsletter: Keir Starmer wants to fill the Boris Johnson-shaped void
  • Europeans lack visceral attachment to the EU. Does it matter?
  • Nvidia's Sales Triple, Signaling AI Boom's Staying Power
  • Could the war in Ukraine go nuclear?
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Linux-Smart-Enumeration - Linux Enumeration Tool For Pentesting And CTFs With Verbosity Levels
  • The Kremlin wants to make Ukraine's second city unliveable
  • Could Mark Carney lead Canada?
  • Antarctica's 'Doomsday Glacier' Is Melting Even Faster Than Scientists Thought
  • How Researchers Cracked an 11-Year-Old Password to a $3 Million Crypto Wallet
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Making accounting sexy again
  • Why online marketplaces have not killed the estate sale
  • How independent is India's Supreme Court?
  • AMLO is trying to bury the tragedy of Mexico's missing people
  • After pushing its economy to the brink, Egypt gets a bail-out
  • The first endometriosis drug in four decades is on the horizon
  • The Ticketmaster Data Breach May Be Just the Beginning
  • South Korea's ban on praising the North is ridiculous
  • Google is putting more restrictions on AI Overviews after it told people to put glue on pizza
  • BHP Abandons $50 Billion Anglo American Deal
  • Unknown soldiers
  • A Landslide Buried a Village at 3 a.m. Could It Have Been Predicted?
  • Donald Trump is a convicted felon
  • "A day of shame" for the British state
  • Europe's economy is under attack from all sides
  • China's high-stakes struggle to defy demographic disaster
  • The Barclay brothers and the Crown Agents
  • This week's covers
  • The excitement of 70,000 Swifties can shake the Earth
  • Common sense is not actually very common
  • Australia's enthusiasm for immigration is being tested
  • India's surging food prices are a problem not just for India
  • The People's Liberation Army is not yet as formidable as the West fears
  • Subhunter - A Fast Subdomain Takeover Tool
  • Narendra Modi's flagship growth scheme is off to a sluggish start
  • California lake so green with algae it's visible from space, says Nasa
  • How NIMBYs increase carbon emissions
  • "Don't Look Up", Adam McKay's political farce, is bleakly realistic
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • Is Britain levelling up?
  • Real Madrid Does It Again to Lift Champions League for Record 15th Time
  • The new geography of Paris
  • Where are all the British robots?
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The Senate blocked aid for Ukraine. Now what?
  • Brazil, India and Mexico are taking on China's exports
  • Politics
  • NASA's PACE satellite will tackle the largest uncertainty in climate science
  • Whatever happens next, the Donald Trump effect will continue to stain politics the world over | Simon Tisdall
  • US shale industry's $200bn dealmaking wave redraws energy landscape
  • Even China's own state media sometimes resent state control
  • Emmanuel Macron's vision of a more muscular Europe is coming true
  • Portugal's hard right gets a big election boost
  • Checks and Balance: Trump's guilty verdict and unprecedented presidenting
  • Is Julius Malema the most dangerous man in South Africa?
  • The Multimillion-Dollar Scandal Rocking Pickleball
  • Inside the shared studio of Thom Yorke and Stanley Donwood
  • High Rates and Prices Leave Many Stuck in a Starter Home
  • How to build a global business empire in the 21st century
  • The challenges of steering a hypersonic plane
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Meet the maharajas of the world's biggest democracy
  • Climate Change: The Complete WIRED Guide
  • The WIRED AI Elections Project
  • Fighting disinformation gets harder, just when it matters most
  • Israel's relations with America reach breaking point
  • For its next phase of growth, India needs a new reform agenda
  • Politics
  • Xi Jinping's chaos-loving friends
  • Politics and technology are pushing oil firms to cut methane
  • Russia outsmarts Western sanctions—and China is paying attention
  • India's YouTubers take on Narendra Modi
  • Moviemaking and gamemaking are converging
  • The Brady Bunch Breaks Down: Estate Fights Tear Stepfamilies Apart
  • Boeing Sets Its Own Quality Targets Under Pact With FAA
  • Gap Snaps Slump With Sales Gain
  • General-election forecast: will Labour destroy the Conservatives?
  • China's quest to become a robot superpower
  • How to survive a superpower split
  • How oceans became new technological battlefields
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Will FTX's customers be repaid?
  • Generative AI is a marvel. Is it also built on theft?
  • You can now watch Godzilla Minus One at home on Netflix
  • Producing fake information is getting easier
  • Next, Britain's retail superstar
  • When to sell your stocks
  • Much of Russia's intellectual elite has fled the country
  • Andrés Manuel López Obrador's mañaneras boost his presidency
  • Move fast and mend things
  • This week's cover
  • China's satellites are improving rapidly. Its army will benefit
  • Xi Jinping's surprising new source of economic advice
  • Ronald Blythe recorded the passing, and continuance, of rural life
  • Can Benetton be patched up?
  • Cutting-Edge Cosmic Microwave Background Observatory Hits South Pole Stumbling Block
  • India's Supreme Court delivers a rare setback for Narendra Modi
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • A Felon in the Oval Office Would Test the American System
  • Gazans are rapidly losing access to the internet
  • Homeland Economics
  • Ukrainian drone strikes are hurting Russia's oil industry
  • Chad Daybell sentenced to death for murders of his wife and his girlfriend's children
  • America, Israel and Hamas are trapped in a dangerous impasse
  • An assassination attempt against Slovakia's prime minister, Robert Fico
  • Crunch time for Xi Jinping at China's annual political meeting
  • 50 Hilarious Moments From Live TV History
  • The rich world faces a brutal spending crunch
  • Two cities show the problems faced by Britain's renters
  • Will Israel retaliate against Iran, or hold back?
  • A Sudanese gathering outside the country proposes a third way
  • Romania's hard right looks strong in a year of four elections
  • O.J. Simpson's defence was a harbinger of post-truth politics
  • Nigeria's currency crisis is decades in the making
  • England's historic buildings are causing headaches
  • What would get China's consumers spending?
  • Teslas Can Still Be Stolen With a Cheap Radio Hack—Despite New Keyless Tech
  • Dyson 360 Vis Nav review: Superior suction at a steep price
  • Many Ukrainian drones have been disabled by Russian jamming
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • China's Chang'e-6 probe lands on far side of the moon aiming to return first samples to Earth
  • Is China a winner from the Red Sea attacks?
  • India's unprecedented love-in with the Middle East
  • Emmanuel Macron in his own words (French)
  • Is Argentina's new president too divisive to fix a broken economy?
  • Far-right ideas are gaining a renewed respectability in France
  • The old bank/card model is still entrenched in the rich world
  • Tesla Recalls 125,000 Cars Over Seat Belt Issue
  • KAL's cartoon
  • China's shoppers are gloomy and picky
  • India's civil society is under attack
  • Best Chest Strap Heart-Rate Monitors for 2024 - CNET
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • China's deep-water fishing fleet is the world's most rapacious
  • LG QNED 90 T Review: Good Picture at the Cost of an Annoying UI
  • Alexei Navalny didn't just defy Putin—he showed up his depravity
  • Giancarlo Esposito Has Joined Captain America: Brave New World
  • Iran attacks Israel, risking a full-blown regional war
  • Ukrainian refugees remain in limbo
  • Fisker collapsed under the weight of its founder's promises
  • The Philippines bans some genetically modified foods
  • Can Argentina's next president fix the economy? Don't count on it
  • Fossils from an Ice Age 'Tree Spa' Discovered
  • War in space is no longer science fiction
  • Gulf countries are becoming major players in Africa
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The world is in the midst of a city-building boom
  • An espionage case hurts Chinese relations with Australia
  • Chinese State Media Hint at Possible PBOC Bond Selling
  • SSI Recipients Aren't Getting a Payment in June. Here's Why - CNET
  • How India could become an Asian tiger
  • Pakistan's generals look increasingly desperate
  • In the Philippines a decades-long conflict nears its endgame
  • Protests against a Russian-style law threaten Georgia's government
  • Ukraine is ignoring US warnings to end drone operations inside Russia
  • AI models can improve corner-kick tactics
  • David Bowie delved into his own past on "Toy"
  • The Hunt for Ultralight Dark Matter
  • Android Update: Theft Detection Lock Knows When Your Phone Is Stolen
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Why South African Voters Turned Against the A.N.C.
  • The Low-Paid Humans Behind AI's Smarts Ask Biden to Free Them From 'Modern Day Slavery'
  • The failing ANC is rejected by over half of South Africa
  • Meet the Swedish firm trying to shake up heat pumps
  • Elon Musk is feuding with Brazil's powerful Supreme Court
  • Cops Are Just Trolling Cybercriminals Now
  • NATO is agonising over whether to let Ukraine join
  • KAL's cartoon
  • A biographer explores Greta Garbo's glamour and vacuity
  • India's leaders must deal with three economic weaknesses
  • What's an Influencer? The Complete WIRED Guide
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Narendra Modi ramps up the Muslim-baiting
  • The 28 greatest Shakespeare mysteries
  • What China's central bank and Costco shoppers have in common
  • Russia's gas business will never recover from the war in Ukraine
  • How a Russia-linked mine may keep the ANC in power
  • Streaming services are helping Arab producers liven up television
  • The ASUS ROG Ally X improves on the original in all the right ways
  • Gulf governments are changing, but not how they talk to citizens
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Meta Takes Down 'Inauthentic' Accounts on Facebook, Instagram Linked to Israeli Firm
  • Is there a genetic link between endometriosis and the brain?
  • A war correspondent's intimate portrait of an embattled minority
  • Vger - An Interactive CLI Application For Interacting With Authenticated Jupyter Instances
  • Do rising methane levels herald a climate feedback loop?
  • Sony Days of Play Sale: Consoles, Games, and More
  • How China stifles dissent without a KGB or Stasi of its own
  • In Tomb Raider's New Trailer, Lara Croft Is Back to Her Old Self
  • Who will lead the LVMH luxury empire?
  • Conviction politics: Joe Biden sees opportunity in Trump's guilty verdict
  • Turkey's President Erdogan faces a new challenge from Islamists
  • Ultra-Orthodox Jewish women are staging a sex-strike
  • Javier Milei will be Argentina's first libertarian president
  • Wanted: a new economics writer
  • Why a stronger dollar is dangerous
  • Lunar Dust Could 'Sandblast' Astronauts on the Moon, Studies Warn
  • Dortmund try to outrun reality before sipping from cup of sadness again | Jonathan Liew
  • US Official Warns a Cell Network Flaw Is Being Exploited for Spying
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Pelé went from poverty to football superstardom
  • With its latest assassination, Israel is testing Iran
  • The mafiosi of Naples turn white-collar
  • The 10th-gen Apple iPad hits a low of $300, plus the rest of the week's best tech deals
  • Why are there so many suicides in rich, stable Uruguay?
  • Netflix Fight Between Mike Tyson and Jake Paul Postponed Over Health Issue
  • Should every schoolchild eat free?
  • Two new books shed light on the plight of the Uyghurs
  • The temptations of deferred removals
  • Bill Skarsgård's Pennywise Returns for It Prequel Series
  • How to Remove Your Personal Info From Google's Search Results
  • Wasting Too Much Time on Your Phone? Tips to Regain Control---and Feel Better
  • How China is making the burger its own
  • Nigel Slater's recipes for cucumber, mint and cornichon pâté, and strawberries with grapefruit
  • Inside the world of crazy rich Indians
  • America could face its most active hurricane season ever
  • An animated documentary tells the story of Amin, an Afghan refugee
  • Portrait cards that sparked a Victorian collecting craze – in pictures
  • US Sues to Break Up Ticketmaster and Live Nation, Alleging Monopoly Abuse
  • South Korea's writers and directors play Squid Game
  • Brazil already exceeds worst-case forecast for dengue cases this year
  • Trump Wishes His Trial Were Rigged
  • China's economic bright spots provide a warning
  • The Maldives is cosying up to China
  • Hard times for China's micro-industrialists
  • Why India's elite loves Narendra Modi
  • The Hollywood Foreign Press Association does penance for its sins
  • From hypersonic missiles to undersea drones, the PLA is making leaps
  • How to watch Sony's PlayStation State of Play event this evening
  • The damage done by Russia's hack of Germany's defence ministry
  • Film-makers are finding horror, not comfort, in the natural world
  • We Want Every Single One of These Rad New Pop Culture Posters
  • AI Agents, Cybertruck Fails, and the Founder of Truth Social
  • Does Perplexity's "answer engine" threaten Google?
  • Ukrainians: share your reaction to your country qualifying for Euro 2024
  • The unfair trial of Jimmy Lai begins in Hong Kong
  • Under Joe Biden, America struggles to reassert itself in Africa
  • Business
  • How Often Do Supernovas Strike Earth?
  • China is sending escapers back to North Korea
  • Congo brings back the death penalty
  • Wild boar hybrids are raising hell on the Canadian prairies
  • The "effective altruism" movement is louder than it is large
  • Deposing Israel's king
  • Israel is ratcheting up its shadow war with Iran
  • "Trading Places" and the challenge of troubling art of the past
  • How China, Russia and Iran are forging closer ties
  • A grinding, difficult war on Ukraine's southern front
  • Ticketmaster hack may affect more than 500 million customers
  • Y-Brush DuoBrush Sonic Toothbrush Review: U-Shaped and Sonic Brush Heads
  • The evolution of forced labour in Xinjiang
  • Japanese businesses are trapped between America and China
  • After a dramatic week in Gaza, where does the war stand?
  • There's New Hope for an HIV Vaccine
  • Heart attacks, strokes, dementia—can Biden and Trump beat the odds?
  • Poles and Ukrainians are at loggerheads. That's good news for Putin
  • Apple is right not to rush headlong into generative AI
  • Javier Milei implements shock therapy in Argentina
  • The Middle East has a militia problem
  • Elmore Nickleberry pinned his hopes to Martin Luther King
  • Radio Modi: How India's prime minister sweet-talks the nation
  • How Britain's dirtiest region hopes to become a hub for clean energy
  • Pervez Musharraf was one of Pakistan's better dictators
  • 10 Standout Horror Movies and TV Series to Stream on Hulu
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Cashless talk
  • Ceci n'est pas un divorce: why surging separatism won't break Belgium
  • The World's Most Important Industry Has a New Captain—and She's Piloting It Into the 21st Century
  • China Lifts Ban on Most Australian Beef Exporters
  • Can lorries go green faster?
  • Pssst! Want to read something about rumour and innuendo?
  • Dave Calhoun bows out as chief executive of Boeing
  • Can women-only factories help more Indian women into work?
  • Izumi Kenta wants to shake up Japan's opposition
  • The fight to dethrone the dollar
  • Zvi Zamir oversaw a programme of Israeli assassinations
  • Can the rich world escape its baby crisis?
  • Nicolás Maduro's sham election: the sequel
  • What the softening of the Sun says about Britain
  • Climate activist defaces Monet painting in Paris
  • One of the Middle East's oldest conflicts has entered a new era
  • Massive farmers' protests are a headache for Narendra Modi
  • How Europe's fear of migrants came to dominate its foreign policy
  • Some of the new king's realms may become republics
  • Pocket-Sized AI Models Could Unlock a New Era of Computing
  • KAL's cartoon
  • An inspiring, if frustrating, portrayal of the Williams sisters' coach and dad
  • Facebook turned off the news in Canada. What happened next?
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Just Look Inside This Gorgeous Star Wars Picture Book
  • World of Warcraft is coming to GeForce Now
  • Backyard Conservation Protects Wildlife Close to Home
  • The 46 Best Shows on Netflix Right Now (May 2024)
  • Britain's black-mass problem
  • Dressing for Court
  • Jurassic World 4 Has Found Itself Another Marvel Star
  • Behind the Scenes of Scarlett Johansson's Battle With OpenAI
  • A year on from the white-paper protests, China looks much different
  • Best Sports Streaming Service for 2024 - CNET
  • Video: Busting globalisation myths
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • How Researchers Cracked an 11-Year-Old Password to a $3 Million Crypto Wallet
  • The military dictatorship controls less than 50% of Myanmar
  • The "Scream" franchise adds another self-referential sequel
  • Big Oil May Pay Billions for Climate Pollution under New Legislation
  • Is China a climate saint or villain?
  • WeWork Survived Bankruptcy. Now It Has to Make Coworking Pay Off
  • Gandhi v Modi: crunch time for Congress as India prepares to vote
  • Why the Human Case of Bird Flu With Respiratory Symptoms Is Concerning
  • How pop culture went multipolar
  • He Emptied an Entire Crypto Exchange Onto a Thumb Drive. Then He Disappeared
  • Why AI needs to learn new languages
  • Rings of Power Will Not Bring Back One of Season One's Most Intriguing Stars
  • Can Elon Musk's xAI take on OpenAI?
  • Elon Musk and Jamie Dimon Are Making Peace
  • A new hate-crime law in Scotland causes widespread concern
  • Russian Missiles Hit Ukraine's Energy System, Again
  • Pemex is the world's most indebted oil company
  • The most important climate agency you've never heard of
  • What Ukraine's bloody battlefield is teaching medics
  • How cheap drones are transforming warfare in Ukraine
  • How two small Texas towns became the patent-law centre of America
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Asus ROG Ally X Gaming Handheld Was Built From Your Wishes - CNET
  • Jessamine Chan's gripping debut novel sends up modern parenting
  • Boeing Was This Close to Launching Astronauts
  • Donald Tusk mulls which of the previous government's plans to axe
  • Engadget Podcast: MoviePass founder Stacy Spikes on the MovieCrash documentary
  • SQLMC - Check All Urls Of A Domain For SQL Injections
  • Local Coworking Spaces Thrive Where WeWork Dared Not Go
  • Can Haiti's police hold on?
  • 'Furiosa' Crystalizes the Power—and Limits—of Cli-Fi
  • Could Aldi's supermarkets conquer America?
  • A new type of jet engine could revive supersonic air travel
  • This Hidden iPhone Feature Could Help You Relax or Focus - CNET
  • Jeremy Clarkson, patron saint of the Great British bore
  • Donald Trump's first criminal trial will be both momentous and tawdry
  • The fight over one of Britain's last steel plants
  • Does String Theory Actually Describe the World? AI May Be Able to Tell
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Why are Chinese nationalists turning on Chinese brands?
  • Luis Abinader is poised for a thumping re-election win
  • India's government implements a controversial citizenship law
  • Apple is reportedly overhauling Siri with AI for improved voice controls
  • Sudan: the war the world forgot
  • Ukraine's desperate struggle to defend Kharkiv
  • Gloria Allen ran a charm school for young trans women
  • Netflix's animated Tomb Raider series now has a release date
  • The AI Revolution Is Already Losing Steam
  • The Spacetop G1 is an AR laptop with no screen
  • Will lab-grown meat ever make it onto supermarket shelves?
  • A nationalist effort to rebrand the Chinese dragon
  • Andrés Manuel López Obrador splashes out as elections loom
  • 45 New Sci-Fi, Fantasy, and Horror Books Coming Your Way in June
  • America's Asian allies are trying to Trump-proof their policies
  • SpaceX Launch Targets Safe Reentry of Starship Megarocket—If It Doesn't Explode First
  • Why the global cocoa market is melting down
  • Corruption is surging across Latin America
  • The ICJ orders restraint from Israel in Rafah
  • Elie Hassenfeld Q&A: '$5,000 to Save a Life Is a Bargain'
  • Reaper - Proof Of Concept On BYOVD Attack
  • A new book explains the tragic failure of Boeing's 737 MAX
  • Abdulrazak Gurnah wins the Nobel prize in literature for 2021
  • New Jersey's electoral process just got upended
  • Israel is more popular than social-media posts suggest
  • America's trust in its institutions has collapsed
  • Toriyama Akira was probably Japan's greatest manga master
  • We Should All Look as Stylish at 44 as This Corvette
  • Rural white voters in Wisconsin could decide America's election
  • Thirty years after Rwanda, genocide is still a problem from hell
  • Where is the "motherhood penalty" greatest?
  • Mexicans Poised to Elect First Woman President
  • Why skipping ropes are so expensive in China
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • Gina Lollobrigida's ambition was her strength and her weakness
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Dow Rises, Stocks Log Monthly Gains
  • Self-Driving Cars: The Complete Guide
  • Ioctlance - A Tool That Is Used To Hunt Vulnerabilities In X64 WDM Drivers
  • Checks and Balance newsletter: Trump's erstwhile allies
  • Donors are already mulling a Marshall Plan for Ukraine
  • Android Now Lets You Edit Text Messages
  • You can no longer use Tumblr's tipping feature
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Thank God(zilla) the MonsterVerse Exists
  • How Your Itch Can Make Others Scratch
  • How the financial system would respond to a superpower war
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