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2333 Interesting News

  • Narendra Modi needs to win over low-income Indians
  • The Creators of 'Industry' Know Banking Is a Rigged Game
  • Gary Gensler is the most controversial man in American finance
  • China doesn't want people flaunting their wealth
  • Pema Tseden was the founder and builder of Tibetan cinema
  • Stadiums Are Embracing Face Recognition. Privacy Advocates Say They Should Stick to Sports
  • England v Sri Lanka: second men's cricket Test match, day three – live
  • The travails and bold aims of the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi
  • How a tide of tech money is transforming charity
  • Russia's bloody summer offensive is hurting Ukraine
  • Jiang Zemin oversaw a wave of economic change, but not much political reform
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Wines That Entertain as Well as Impress
  • Willie Mays's philosophy was simple: They throw the ball, I hit the ball
  • Iran's electronic confrontation with Israel
  • The number of American students in China is going up again
  • The world's population has reached 8bn. Don't panic
  • 'SimCity' Isn't a Model of Reality. It's a Libertarian Toy Land
  • China is overhauling its company law
  • A Roller Derby Team Becomes a Bastion of Resistance to a Transgender Ban
  • Donald Trump at Moms for Liberty says Ivanka 'hired millions of people'
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The Economist's final prediction points to a Tory wipeout in Britain
  • Vienna's social housing, lauded by progressives, pushes out the poor
  • What can Olympians teach executives?
  • China has become a scientific superpower
  • The firepower of Iran-backed militias, in maps
  • The rich world's teachers are increasingly morose
  • We are hiring a new South Asia bureau chief
  • Abortion Is the Top Issue for Many Women, Who Trust Harris More Than Trump
  • 'Corn Sweat' and Climate Change Bring Sweltering Weather to the Midwest
  • The Kamala Harris effect on the polls has been dramatic
  • The US Grid Is Adding Batteries at a Much Faster Rate Than Natural Gas
  • Vietnam's ruling communists rush to fill the country's top jobs
  • KAL's cartoon
  • The Pentagon Is Planning a Drone 'Hellscape' to Defend Taiwan
  • The EU should be the world's heat-pump pioneer
  • By 2100 half the world's children will be born in sub-Saharan Africa
  • University protests about Gaza spread to the Middle East
  • Advance Auto Parts to Sell Worldpac to Carlyle for $1.5 Billion
  • Singapore has achieved astounding economic success
  • After Dobbs, Americans are turning to permanent contraception
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • The Best OTC Hearing Aids (2024): Tested and Reviewed
  • This week's cover
  • Jerome Powell (almost) declares victory over inflation
  • How an English miner's daughter rose to work in the White House
  • Want to Win a Bike Race? Hack Your Rival's Wireless Shifters
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Pyrit - The Famous WPA Precomputed Cracker
  • The org behind the dataset used to train Stable Diffusion claims it has removed CSAM
  • Sleep Easy This Labor Day With $300 off Any Vaya Mattress and 15% off Platform Beds
  • American politicians are the oldest in the rich world
  • Jerome Powell, chairman of the Federal Reserve
  • Some Labradors have a predisposition to obesity
  • Israel needs to resist irrational retaliation
  • The West Coast's Fanciest Stolen Bikes Are Getting Trafficked by One Mastermind in Jalisco, Mexico
  • Private firms are driving a revolution in solar power in Africa
  • The world's richest countries in 2023
  • EU handouts have long been wasteful. Now they must be fixed
  • 'Little Gaza': Inside the fight for the West Bank
  • Kamala Harris's cost-of-living plan will end in failure
  • The trouble with reality in fiction
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Russia is attacking Ukraine's agricultural exports
  • This week's covers
  • Starry new productions show "Macbeth" is the tragedy for our times
  • The best ereaders for 2024
  • Self-Driving Cars: The Complete Guide
  • Taylor Swift Concert Terror Plot Was Thwarted by Key CIA Tip
  • New Pain Medication Suzetrigine Prevents Pain Signals from Reaching Brain
  • Are American rents rigged by algorithms?
  • The rise of the truly cruel summer
  • Generative AI Transformed English Homework. Math Is Next
  • Politics
  • Athlete Accused of Abuse Had Harassed Other Paralympians, Lawsuit Claims
  • Chile's crisis is not over yet
  • The Covid-19 Summer Wave Is So Big, the FDA Might Release New Vaccines Early
  • Funding social care: an international comparison
  • AI models can improve corner-kick tactics
  • Indonesia's new capital is built on vanity
  • Why the next Westminster scandal is already here
  • The lessons of Africa's tax revolts
  • "Trading Places" and the challenge of troubling art of the past
  • The promise of crypto has not lived up to its initial excitement
  • Class, race and the chances of outgrowing poverty in America
  • This week's covers
  • An AWS Configuration Issue Could Expose Thousands of Web Apps
  • Clues to a possible cure for AIDS
  • Youth is a superpower and it's great to see our Paralympians harnessing it | Ade Adepitan
  • Defending U.S. Open champion Novak Djokovic knocked out in shock defeat
  • Afghans are suffering. Don't expect any tears from the Taliban
  • Wally Amos built, and lost, a delicious empire
  • Americans' Economic Mood Brightens---a Bit
  • The fightback against Javier Milei's radical reforms has begun
  • India's electronics industry is surging
  • Nicolás Maduro, Venezuela's dictator, thumbs his nose at Joe Biden
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Best Labor Day Appliance Deals: Big Savings on Refrigerators, Dishwashers, Mixers, and More
  • Blighty newsletter: Labour is demolishing the Tories' pet projects
  • A global recession is not in prospect
  • How one pandemic made another one worse
  • Para cyclist Emily Petricola defends title as Australians sparkle in Paris velodrome
  • The global tourism boom is shifting to Asia
  • Going green could bring huge benefits for India's economy
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The poisonous global politics of water
  • Autonomous vehicles are coming, but slowly
  • Europe prepares for a mighty trade war
  • The Slow-Burn Nightmare of the National Public Data Breach
  • The National Interest Is What the President Says It Is
  • Generative AI Transformed English Homework. Math Is Next
  • UK general election: live results and analysis
  • Drastic Molecular Shifts in People's 40s and 60s Might Explain Age-Related Health Changes
  • Why cooking causes 4m premature deaths a year
  • 'Internet prophet': arrest of Telegram CEO could strengthen heroic image
  • The race to become leader of Britain's Conservatives
  • Car firms are trying out new ways to sell mobility
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Sotheby's earnings plunge as art market catches a chill
  • Summer picks: the science of 'weird shit' – podcast
  • How Asia's wild west shakes up the modern world
  • Without fanfare, the Philippines is getting richer
  • Air Canada Pilots Give Union Strike Mandate
  • The first week after prison is the deadliest for ex-inmates
  • What the remaking of Labour reveals about Sir Keir Starmer
  • Asia's most expensive cities, ranked
  • Australia joins the industrial arms race
  • Could America fight its enemies without breaking the law?
  • The best television shows of 2021
  • In the Philippines a decades-long conflict nears its endgame
  • Thomas Neff's idea rid the world of a third of its nuclear warheads
  • Why fake research is rampant in China
  • Engadget Podcast: iPhone 16 and Apple rumors with Bloomberg's Mark Gurman
  • Harmful 'Nudify' Websites Used Google, Apple, and Discord Sign-On Systems
  • Trees alone will not save the world
  • The Trademark Tug-of-War Over 'Demure' Shows a Massive Meme Power Shift
  • The Chinese scientist who sequenced covid is barred from his lab
  • A court says Google is a monopolist. Now what?
  • Was your degree really worth it?
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • How Chinese networks clean dirty money on a vast scale
  • Antidepressant use is surging in Britain
  • Telegram CEO Pavel Durov has been charged and released from police custody
  • A Texas judge gives a nod to America's at-home distillers
  • Ultrasound Brain Stimulation Boosts Mindfulness
  • A new play stages excerpts from the Grenfell Tower fire inquiry
  • Climate change casts a shadow over Britain's biggest food export
  • Nvidia Can't Escape Shadow of AI Spending Fears
  • Online Action Movie Fandom Birthed a New Film-Fest Era
  • Health-care reform is upending the lives of China's doctors
  • On the 50th anniversary of "Ways of Seeing" and "G."
  • The long goodbye
  • Rushdi Sarraj loved to record what others did not or would not see
  • Kamala Harris lacks charisma and time
  • The disease that most afflicts England's National Health Service
  • Share your experience of travelling with a disability
  • How Starbucks caffeinates local economies
  • Seven & i shareholders set deadline for status briefing on takeover bid
  • Carta's ill-fated secondaries business finally found a buyer
  • Conservatives Are Fighting Over Ronald Reagan's Legacy
  • Fed's preferred inflation measure held steady at 2.5% in July
  • Two new books assess the geopolitical lessons of covid-19
  • Elon Musk's Starship reaches orbit on its third attempt
  • LG debuts its ThinQ ON smart home hub that comes with an AI voice assistant
  • Palmer Luckey and Anduril want to shake up armsmaking
  • Crypto cowboys have found paradise in Paraguay
  • National payment systems are proliferating
  • Sonos made a public Trello board to track its broken app fixes
  • Carmen Callil changed British reading habits for ever
  • The ubiquitous J.B. Pritzker, the man behind the Democrats' party
  • Why Kamala Harris picked Tim Walz as her running-mate
  • At last, Wall Street has something to cheer
  • Why a new art gallery in Bangalore is important for Indian science
  • Russian spies are back—and more dangerous than ever
  • Adult Drowning Deaths Are Increasing. Swimming Lessons and Reduced Alcohol Use Could Prevent Them
  • Gene-editing drugs are moving from lab to clinic at lightning speed
  • Youth clubs in Britain have been vanishing
  • How vulnerable is Israel to sanctions?
  • Floating solar has a bright future
  • How many Russian soldiers have died in Ukraine?
  • No wonder Macron's gambling: Europe is home to the high-roller
  • Central-bank digital currencies are talked about more than coming to fruition
  • Why Joe Biden won't go
  • Why South Africa's army is floundering in Congo
  • The world's most, and least, walkable cities
  • Babygirl review – Nicole Kidman overwhelmed by lust as CEO having torrid and toxic affair
  • The Alleged Kickback Schemes That Inflated Costs for Home Buyers
  • The WIRED Guide to Aliens
  • The "Venice of Africa" is sinking into the sea
  • An interview with Lawrence Wong, Singapore's next PM
  • Narendra Modi ramps up the Muslim-baiting
  • Apple, Nvidia Are in Talks to Invest in OpenAI
  • What Is Cyberwar? The Complete WIRED Guide
  • The far right has captured Israel's police
  • 'The police don't seem to care': in a rural California town vexed by gun violence, families search for clues on their own
  • Daniel Brush's drive to understand beauty led him to the life of a hermit
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • From hypersonic missiles to undersea drones, the PLA is making leaps
  • Business
  • Israel Is Buying Google Ads to Discredit the UN's Top Gaza Aid Agency
  • How to Stay Prepared and Informed for Extreme Weather
  • Anne Innis Dagg devoted her life to the world's tallest creature
  • Israel and Hamas are not that far from a ceasefire agreement
  • Ask Shrimsley: Should I try 'raw-dogging'?
  • Visiting Europe, Xi Jinping brings up an old grievance
  • Business
  • Latin America's new hard right: Bukele, Milei, Kast and Bolsonaro
  • Why so many Chinese graduates cannot find work
  • Transfer window verdict: how every Premier League club fared this summer
  • Save Up to 30% Off Everything at Brooklinen for Labor Day
  • Charge Up All Your Devices With 25% Off Accessories at the Satechi Labor Day Sale
  • France seeks a new government
  • Business
  • Attempts to make supply chains "resilient" are likely to fail
  • Thirty years after Rwanda, genocide is still a problem from hell
  • The wisdom in calling Donald Trump weird
  • Sudan: the war the world forgot
  • Politics
  • Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers and Help for Aug. 31 #447
  • H5N1 avian flu could cause a human pandemic
  • Will the 'Car-Free' Los Angeles Olympics Work?
  • What makes Europe so liveable?
  • Our Carrie Bradshaw index: where Americans can afford to live solo in 2024
  • The economics of American lotteries
  • Meet the world's new arms dealers
  • The Mexican president's latest boondoggle officially opens
  • Trump Contorts Himself on Abortion in Search of Political Gain
  • Sheikh Hasina faces her biggest crisis in years
  • Chinese weapons are taking over in Africa
  • Will El Mayo's arrest slow the spread of fentanyl?
  • The world is (still) failing to come close to its climate goals
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • What to Know about Eastern Equine Encephalitis Virus Spread by Mosquitoes
  • Two new books shed light on the plight of the Uyghurs
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Azerbaijan's government turns on its critics at home
  • Business
  • The 63 Best Movies on Disney+ Right Now (September 2024)
  • Pavel Durov's Arrest Leaves Telegram Hanging in the Balance
  • Can Samsung get its mojo back?
  • Gretchen Whitmer would like to be America's first woman president
  • As seas rise, the relocation of Caribbean islanders has begun
  • "You will always be 0% prepared": Ukraine's refugees on life far from home
  • The Apartment Rental Market Is Rigged by Algorithms, a DOJ Lawsuit Alleges
  • The 39 Best Movies on Netflix Right Now (September 2024)
  • Russia's Youngest Conscripts Unexpectedly See Combat Against Ukraine's Invasion
  • What does Labour's win mean for British foreign policy?
  • Romesh Ranganathan: 'My greatest fear? My children ending up anything like me'
  • "Don't Look Up", Adam McKay's political farce, is bleakly realistic
  • Without AC, Texan Prisons Sentence People to Unsafe Heat
  • On shame, Liz Truss and the turnip Taliban
  • Yurii Kerpatenko refused to bow to Russian orders
  • KAL's cartoon
  • No-strings philanthropy is giving charities more decision-making power
  • Telegram CEO Pavel Durov's Arrest Linked to Sweeping Criminal Investigation
  • Brazil and Colombia are curbing destruction of Amazon rainforest
  • The Middle East braces for wider war as Iran weighs its response
  • Cannabis: The Complete WIRED Guide
  • Shrinking populations mean less growth and a more fractious world
  • Latin America's farmers are cashing in on hot hot-cocoa prices
  • Many small islands have no room for manoeuvre at COP28
  • Dating apps develop AI 'wingmen' to generate better chat-up lines
  • Peter Schickele and P.D.Q. Bach were sides of the same coin
  • Saginaw voters: tell us which issues will decide the US election
  • Britain is a home but not a haven for Hong Kongers
  • China wants to export education, too
  • How to reduce the risk of developing dementia
  • Business
  • Cheap Asian motorcycles are transforming African cities
  • Australian Winemaker to Benefit as China Uncorks Imports
  • Is Xi Jinping an AI doomer?
  • Turkey's asset-price boom is good for some but terrible for most
  • A Popular iOS Illustration App Is Saying No to Generative AI
  • European millionaires seek a safe harbour from populism
  • 'Sloth Fever' Virus Is Spreading. Here's What You Need to Know about Oropouche
  • Israeli aircraft buzz Beirut as the drums of war bang loud
  • Edgar Bronfman Raises Offer for National Amusements, Paramount Stake to $6 Billion
  • How the Rosetta Stone was deciphered
  • Hordes of cicadas are emerging simultaneously in America
  • Investors panicked after Mexico's election. Were they right?
  • Business
  • For its next phase of growth, India needs a new reform agenda
  • Best Amazon Labor Day Deals: Over 30 of the Best Deals on Tech, Home Goods and More
  • Why you have an accent in a foreign language
  • A price war breaks out among China's AI-model builders
  • The Middle East has a militia problem
  • The Qatar World Cup shows how football is changing
  • How Are These Mineral Deposits Producing Oxygen from the Ocean Floor?
  • Was Kamala Harris's big interview a success? Sort of | Moira Donegan
  • A biographer explores Greta Garbo's glamour and vacuity
  • Thousands of Corporate Secrets Were Left Exposed. This Guy Found Them All
  • Lawrence Wong in his own words
  • X labeled an unflattering NPR story about Donald Trump as 'unsafe'
  • Aquatic life under threat as pollution and warmer waters wreak havoc
  • Henry Kissinger and Eric Schmidt take on AI
  • Japan's mind-bending bento-box economics
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Why companies get inflation wrong
  • The revolt against Binyamin Netanyahu
  • Yelp files antitrust lawsuit against Google
  • Politics
  • Akebono was the first foreign-born grand champion of sumo
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • How the financial system would respond to a superpower war
  • What Is Genetic Testing? The Complete WIRED Guide
  • The 40 Best Shows on Netflix Right Now (September 2024)
  • New industrial policies will make the world more unequal
  • Massive Megalith That Predates Stonehenge Shows Science Savvy of Neolithic Humans
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Do children in England talk too little?
  • China's revealing struggle with childhood myopia
  • Lessons in capitalism from Whole Foods and Trader Joe's
  • The rebuilding of Berlin's Pergamon Museum is 40 years behind schedule
  • A Russian missile hits a children's hospital in central Kyiv
  • Bavarian Nordic Shares Continue Higher
  • Colin Huang, China's richest man
  • Telegram Founder Pavel Durov Charged Over Alleged Criminal Activity on the App
  • The cracks in America's ultra-strong labour market
  • The 21 Best Movies on Apple TV+ Right Now (August 2024)
  • Guatemala's new president promises a better sort of government
  • America recreates a warfighting command in Japan
  • Maisie Summers-Newton overcomes nerves to retain Paralympic medley title
  • Why do the Japanese love CDs?
  • Headerpwn - A Fuzzer For Finding Anomalies And Analyzing How Servers Respond To Different HTTP Headers
  • Who are the main contenders to be Iran's next president?
  • China's currency is not as influential as once imagined
  • Haiti's transitional government must take office amid gang warfare
  • The Score: Nvidia, Super Micro Computer, Dollar General and More Stocks That Defined the Week
  • Ten charts compare Joe Biden's record with Donald Trump's
  • Time for China to get serious about its methane emissions
  • The Paris Olympics Promised Flying Taxis—Here's Why They Failed to Launch
  • Is coal the new gold?
  • Antarctica, Earth's largest refrigerator, is defrosting
  • Javier Milei has turned Argentina into a libertarian laboratory
  • Republicans adjust their attacks for their new foe, Kamala Harris
  • Save Up to 25% on Made In Cookware During Its Labor Day Sale
  • Hamas's pick of Yahya Sinwar as leader makes a ceasefire less likely
  • Inna Solovyova studied both stagecraft and the Russian soul
  • Whole Woman's Health abortion clinic offers 'hopeful' sanctuary for US south
  • For Hannah Pick-Goslar, paths crossed in an extraordinary way
  • Geofence Warrants Ruled Unconstitutional—but That's Not the End of It
  • Your Guide to Surviving Extreme Weather
  • A new age of sail begins
  • The truth behind Olena Zelenska's $1.1m Cartier haul
  • A Look Inside the Airbus Factory Revolutionizing the World of Airplanes
  • The Green Economy Is Hungry for Copper—and People Are Stealing, Fighting, and Dying to Feed It
  • A flower's female sex organs can speed up fertilisation
  • A stealth attack came close to compromising the world's computers
  • Tesla Finance VP Departs in Latest Executive Exit at Automaker
  • Mangosuthu Buthelezi had his own vision for a democratic South Africa
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The King of Java inflames an Indonesian "democratic emergency"
  • Many mental-health conditions have bodily triggers
  • A deadly new strain of mpox is raising alarm
  • Politics
  • Chinese firms are expanding in South-East Asia
  • India's difficult business environment is improving
  • The Best Cold Plunge Pools in 2024—I Spent Months Testing to Find the Best
  • China's presence in Latin America has expanded dramatically
  • The cocaine trade is booming in Europe's Caribbean territories
  • Are manufacturing jobs really that good?
  • Donald Trump's trade hawk is plotting behind bars
  • JA4+ - Suite Of Network Fingerprinting Standards
  • America's giant armsmakers are being outgunned
  • Israel and Hizbullah play with fire
  • Europe's economic growth is extremely fragile
  • The best podcasts of 2021
  • Be a volunteer at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Best Labor Day Phone Deals: Save Hundreds on Smartphones From Google, Samsung, Apple and More
  • Will the 'Car-Free' Los Angeles Olympics Work?
  • Spotify says Apple 'discontinued' the tech for some of its volume controls on iOS
  • Microsoft and Activision Blizzard accused of 'bad faith bargaining' by Raven Software union workers
  • Israel has seen arms embargoes before
  • Ethiopia is in the midst of a kidnapping epidemic
  • Britain's Conservatives rule the Thames Estuary. Not for long
  • A short history of Taiwan and China, in maps
  • Politics
  • How shallow was Labour's victory in the British election?
  • Six charts help to explain 2024's freakish temperatures
  • News Quiz for Aug. 31, 2024
  • We're hiring a global correspondent
  • Meet the maharajas of the world's biggest democracy
  • Nearly All Google Pixel Phones Exposed by Unpatched Flaw in Hidden Android App
  • AMLO is trying to bury the tragedy of Mexico's missing people
  • GiveDirectly does what it says on the tin
  • The Wow! Signal SETI Mystery Might at Last Be Solved
  • India has quietly transformed its ports
  • The US Government Wants You—Yes, You—to Hunt Down Generative AI Flaws
  • The growing global movement to restrain house prices
  • What is the world's loveliest language?
  • Digital twins are making companies more efficient
  • The alarming foreign policies of France's hard right and hard left
  • Britain's railways go from one extreme to another
  • Battlefield lessons
  • Robot waiters and a life-size replica of the pope: photos of the day – Friday
  • Chatbots Are Primed to Warp Reality
  • G42, an Emirati AI hopeful, has big plans
  • How hotels became targets for British rioters
  • Why don't women use artificial intelligence?
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Meet the incels and anti-feminists of Asia
  • How Ukraine's new tech foils Russian aerial attacks
  • Roxie, one of China's few lesbian bars, closes its doors
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Meet the victors in Africa's coup belt
  • Will a new "pact" of ten laws help Europe ease its migrant woes?
  • This Labor Day sale discounts Apple's MagSafe charging pad to just $29
  • Narendra Modi cuddles up to Vladimir Putin in Moscow
  • Apple stands by decision to terminate account belonging to WWDC student winner
  • This week's covers
  • Next-Generation Biotech Is Rendering Some Lab Animals Obsolete
  • Young voters strongly favour Joe Biden, but will they turn out?
  • Is Kamala Harris "brat"?
  • Goldman Sachs to Lay Off Over 1,300 Workers
  • Victoria Amelina explored a land of atrocities and secrets
  • For the Director of Wicked, There's No Place Like Silicon Valley
  • Why Mexico's largest-ever election matters
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Labor Day sales: score a lifetime Babbel subscription at an incredible 76% discount
  • How countries rank by military spending
  • How Robert F. Kennedy junior's effect on the election has shifted
  • Colombia's first avowedly left-wing president is mired in scandal
  • The Van Gogh Museum showcases a rejected early masterpiece
  • John McFall Is Breaking Barriers as the World's First Parastronaut
  • Brazil reckons with the life and legacy of an abolitionist
  • Can Thousands of Huge Machines Capture Enough Carbon to Slow Climate Change?
  • Why are so many of the victims in Gaza children?
  • Fall COVID Vaccines and the Latest Guidance on Tests and Treatment
  • What is The Economist's word of the year for 2021?
  • Donald Trump plays with fire in Atlanta
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Iran's supreme leader is terrified of people power
  • Major Sites Are Saying No to Apple's AI Scraping
  • Even China's own state media sometimes resent state control
  • Hamas and Israel are still far apart over a ceasefire deal
  • Keir Starmer wants to reset relations between Britain and Europe
  • The Dome Is Watching You
  • How much do Palestinians pay to get out of Gaza?
  • What is going wrong for Intel?
  • American consumers are finally cheering up
  • How deep is Britain's fiscal "black hole"?
  • From Southwest to Spirit, budget airlines are in a tailspin
  • The Morning After: GameStop's retro gaming pivot
  • Best Labor Day Tablet Deals 2024: 13 Discounts on Tablets From Apple, Samsung, Amazon and More
  • Why fear is sweeping markets everywhere
  • China mulls a bold test of taxation without representation
  • Indian state capitalism looks to be in trouble
  • As the French hard right triumphs in EU elections, Macron calls snap vote
  • Artificial Sweetener Erythritol Likely Linked to Thrombosis Risk, Study Warns
  • Can Inflatable Outdoor Furniture Ever Be Chic?
  • LDAPWordlistHarvester - A Tool To Generate A Wordlist From The Information Present In LDAP, In Order To Crack Passwords Of Domain Accounts
  • Is America giving Narendra Modi an easy ride?
  • Zvi Zamir oversaw a programme of Israeli assassinations
  • KAL's cartoon
  • How Europe's cities stack up in the cost-of-living index
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • Indians have grown used to getting nice things from politicians
  • Social-media populists have arrived in Japan
  • Many Americans Dislike JD Vance. Donald Trump Isn't One of Them.
  • To see the future of urban warfare, look at Gaza
  • An 'AI Scientist' Is Inventing and Running Its Own Experiments
  • How Ecuador became Latin America's deadliest country
  • Zelenskyy faces backlash over Russia's breach of eastern defences
  • Hong Kong smothers dissent ahead of the Tiananmen anniversary
  • Amid the bombs, Ukrainians rediscover the beach
  • Paris Paralympics 2024: day two – in pictures
  • The covid-19 pandemic is hanging over Britain's election
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The unsteady comeback of the California condor
  • What Texas's oldest motel reveals about the rural South
  • Lawrence Wong will be only the fourth PM in Singapore's history
  • Top Best Buy Labor Day Sales: Big Savings on TVs, Laptops and Video Games
  • Introducing El Boletín, our new weekly newsletter on Latin America
  • Starlink Caught in Crosshairs of Elon Musk's Battle With Brazil
  • True-crime fans are banding together online to try to solve cases
  • A short history of Hollywood's poison-pen letters to itself
  • Deepwater Submarine Recovers Roman Battering Ram From Ancient Battle
  • A new danger for Venezuela's autocrat
  • Britain's oil and gas industry faces an uncertain future
  • US leads wealthy countries spending billions of public money on unproven 'climate solutions'
  • The "effective altruism" movement is louder than it is large
  • Russia's double-punch back against Ukraine's shock raid
  • From football matches to Taylor Swift tickets, Starmer's penchant for perks is a disconcerting trait | Owen Jones
  • Technology is deepening civilian involvement in war
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • "Homeland economics" will make the world poorer
  • The cautionary tale of Huy Fong's hot sauce
  • How the Philippines is turning the water-cannon on China
  • Promising Mpox Drug Fails in Trials as Virus Spreads
  • In North Carolina, the Math for a Supermajority May Come Down to One
  • A changing car industry should result in more choice and better motoring
  • Turkey's president refuses to let sleeping dogs lie
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • Why house prices are surging once again
  • Javier Milei is splurging on the army
  • What to make of China's massive cyber-espionage campaign
  • Robots are suddenly getting cleverer. What's changed?
  • The Best All-in-One Computers, Tested and Reviewed (2024)
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Why Britain's Labour government enjoys hippy-punching
  • How the seven-day week came to rule the world
  • Can America afford its debts?
  • Ebrahim Raisi was obsessed with the security of the people
  • A Fourth Game of Thrones Spin-Off Is Seemingly Still in the Works
  • Israel and the Houthis trade bombs and bluster
  • Anguish about Joe Biden's candidacy is rational, polls suggest
  • A new lab and a new paper reignite an old AI debate
  • Has China reached peak emissions?
  • Apple's latest iOS and iPadOS developer betas include an AI object removal tool for Photos
  • The evolution of Britain's extreme right
  • Ukraine's shock raid deep inside Russia rages on
  • A war correspondent's intimate portrait of an embattled minority
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Business
  • YIMBY cities show how to build homes and contain rents
  • What's an Influencer? The Complete WIRED Guide
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • America's elite universities are bloated, complacent and illiberal
  • The trial of Lucy Letby has shocked British statisticians
  • Loretta Lynn gave all struggling women a voice
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