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2330 Interesting News

  • SpaceX's Starship Looks Like an Alien Spacecraft as It Emerges from the Seafloor
  • The noose around the press in Hong Kong tightens
  • Clothes piling up in your closet? A landmark California bill would mandate brands recycle them
  • Republicans adjust their attacks for their new foe, Kamala Harris
  • The latest in the battle of jamming with electronic beams
  • The deep sea is home to "dark oxygen"
  • The president of Somaliland is bargaining for recognition
  • Humans have altered other species as well as the environment
  • How crises reshaped the world financial system
  • The Woo-Woo Caucus Meets
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Georgina Hayden's recipe for roast courgettes, feta and preserved lemon
  • Who is supplying Russia's arms industry?
  • The number of American students in China is going up again
  • How China's communists fell in love with privatisation
  • The race to prevent satellite Armageddon
  • Swiss Government Says Assisted Suicide Capsule Does Not Meet Safety Standards
  • Self-Driving Cars: The Complete Guide
  • The 16 Best Hair Straighteners We Tested (2024) | WIRED
  • How China thrives in a world of turmoil
  • Rohingya are being forced to fight in Myanmar's civil war
  • Eric Adams's friends keep having their phones taken away
  • The ubiquitous J.B. Pritzker, the man behind the Democrats' party
  • Joe Biden makes plea for democracy in final address to UN General Assembly
  • Five reasons why Indonesia's election matters
  • Winners of the Bird Photographer of the Year 2024
  • Ebrahim Raisi was obsessed with the security of the people
  • Which country has the most Olympic medals?
  • What is going wrong for Intel?
  • Why food is piling up on the edge of Gaza
  • Israel and the Houthis trade bombs and bluster
  • Kaja Kallas, the plain-talking Estonian tipped to be the EU's top diplomat
  • Nike's New CEO Has One Hell of a Challenge Ahead
  • What is the world's loveliest language?
  • Turkey's president refuses to let sleeping dogs lie
  • Eric Freeman hoped to save the Gloucestershire of old
  • Four questions for every manager to ask themselves
  • Why investors are not buying Europe's revival
  • Why America is a "flawed democracy"
  • The rich world's teachers are increasingly morose
  • Batch-cooking ideas for the fridge and freezer | Kitchen aide
  • Online Casino Workers Went on Hunger Strike Over Working Conditions
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • In South-East Asia, the war in Gaza is roiling emotions
  • Should euthanasia be allowed for those with mental illnesses?
  • America keeps Ukraine fighting with its hands tied
  • Israel and Hizbullah play with fire
  • It's a bird, it's a plane…it's a Chinese flying car
  • LVMH is splurging on the Olympics
  • Gary Gensler is the most controversial man in American finance
  • AI Could Still Wreck the Presidential Election
  • Britain's nuclear-test veterans want compensation
  • A short history of Russia and Ukraine
  • Bangladesh's dictator flees—leaving behind a dangerous vacuum
  • How oceans became new technological battlefields
  • Foreign judges are fed up with Hong Kong's political environment
  • The MAGA Scramble to Defend Mark Robinson
  • The clues in Kamala Harris's championing of reproductive rights
  • Israeli Military Raids and Shuts Al Jazeera's West Bank Bureau
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • How many people have died in Gaza?
  • Kamala Harris makes Donald Trump look out of his depth
  • Colm Toibin's new novel brings Thomas Mann to life
  • Will services make the world rich?
  • Get Clickin' and Clackin' With a Mechanical Keyboard for 62% off
  • Why Are There Fewer Spotted Lanternflies in New York City?
  • Why is Xi Jinping building secret commodity stockpiles?
  • Carlson and Vance—Two Smart Guys Who Play Dumb for Power
  • Police are killing more Americans than ever. Where's the outrage?
  • Britain's general election was its least representative ever
  • Apple's AirPods 4 are already on sale in this early Prime Day deal
  • Craigslist Founder Pledges $100 Million to Boost U.S. Cybersecurity
  • Japan's mind-bending bento-box economics
  • This week's covers
  • Mike Lynch was Britain's first software billionaire
  • San Francisco Democrats are embracing "law and order" politics
  • This week's cover
  • The new front line of British politics is just lovely
  • The forgotten importance of the War of Jenkins' Ear
  • A museum in Rotterdam opens up its collection
  • Microsoft's Three Mile Island Deal Signals a Broader Nuclear Comeback
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • CyberChef - The Cyber Swiss Army Knife - A Web App For Encryption, Encoding, Compression And Data Analysis
  • Facebook turned off the news in Canada. What happened next?
  • Why investors are unwise to bet on elections
  • A short history of Taiwan and China, in maps
  • China's robotaxis are racing ahead of Tesla's
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Funding social care: an international comparison
  • The Big Interview Gets Even Bigger
  • Google is bringing Watch OS 5 to the Pixel Watch and Pixel Watch 2
  • Andriy Pilshchykov pleaded for F-16s to be sent to Ukraine
  • Business
  • Why oil supply shocks are not like the 1970s any more
  • Zvi Zamir oversaw a programme of Israeli assassinations
  • Children from Indonesia, Syria and Ukraine share hopes for the future – in pictures
  • The taboos around sexual health are weakening
  • Most US Teens Use Generative AI. Most of Their Parents Don't Know
  • This New Pac-Man Machine Brought Me Closer to My Teen Kids
  • Will a new "pact" of ten laws help Europe ease its migrant woes?
  • The global financial system is in danger of fragmenting
  • Nicolás Maduro's sham election: the sequel
  • The People's Liberation Army is not yet as formidable as the West fears
  • Geopolitics helps reignite New Caledonia's anti-colonial unrest
  • A promising technique could make blood types mutually compatible
  • The world's first nuclear clock is on the horizon
  • Sahra Wagenknecht is Germany's rising political star
  • Israeli retaliation in Lebanon seems inevitable
  • Politics
  • Trump tells trading partners they will lose jobs to the US
  • A changing car industry should result in more choice and better motoring
  • Nike's New CEO Has One Hell of a Challenge Ahead
  • How Boston became the safest big city in America
  • Best Printer Deals: Take Advantage of Huge Savings on Printers From Canon, HP and More
  • This week's cover
  • Biden pledges mpox aid to Africa in his valedictory speech to the United Nations
  • A global recession is not in prospect
  • A new poll of young voters shows Harris with a commanding 31 point lead over Trump
  • The next terrifying war: Israel v Hizbullah
  • Your conference-survival handbook
  • Ballet star Joseph Sissens: 'I'd be in this world of gross privilege, and then I'd go visit my brother in prison'
  • The builder of the Titanic is struggling to stay afloat
  • Why Is It So Much Harder for NASA to Send People to the Moon Now Than It Was during the Apollo Era?
  • How Abercrombie & Fitch got hot again
  • Dither and deliver: Kyiv navigates Putin's red lines — and western indecision
  • Could Kamikawa Yoko be Japan's next prime minister?
  • New Hope for Treating People with Sickle Cell Disease
  • An alternative look at the Trump-Harris debate, in five charts
  • The best television shows of 2021
  • At the World's Largest Shipyard, U.S. Courts an Ally to Face Up to China
  • New technology can keep whales safe from speeding ships
  • The case against "Russia's Mark Zuckerberg" will have lasting effects
  • Drax commits $12.5bn for US power plants as group is lured by IRA tax breaks
  • Meet the world's new arms dealers
  • An inspiring, if frustrating, portrayal of the Williams sisters' coach and dad
  • William Anders took the photo that kicked off the environmental movement
  • The world's most studied rainforest is still yielding new insights
  • The Rodecaster Video packs audio and video production features into one mighty console
  • Why are VPNs getting slower in China?
  • The fate of America's for-profit colleges hinges on the election
  • TikTok's Defense Strategy Involves Throwing Shein and Temu Under the Bus
  • Introducing Analysing Africa, our latest newsletter
  • Heathrow's third runway asks questions of the airport and Labour
  • Andrés Manuel López Obrador splashes out as elections loom
  • Jay Pasachoff travelled the world to catch the Moon eclipsing the Sun
  • Rose Dugdale went from debutante to IRA bombmaker
  • Walkie-Talkies Explode in New Attack on Hezbollah
  • The chilling rise and fall of Wagner Group warlord Yevgeny Prigozhin
  • SAG-AFTRA strikes against League of Legends over voiceover company actions
  • Pokémon Sleep now supports smartwatches for more accurate tracking
  • Social-media populists have arrived in Japan
  • Who's the big boss of the global south?
  • How much cash should be removed from the financial system?
  • Let Us Now Praise Undecided Voters
  • Is it cheaper to rent or buy property?
  • Could there be a US-Mexico trade war?
  • What does Labour's win mean for British foreign policy?
  • China is going crazy for durians
  • Big Tech's New Adversaries in Europe
  • Elinor Otto did not realise what giant strides she was making for women
  • The Complete History And Future of Robots
  • China's ties with Russia are growing more solid
  • Italian right-wingers have renamed Milan's airport after Silvio Berlusconi
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • A Global Initiative to Advance Sickle Cell Research Could Benefit Millions
  • After Years of Warnings, Telegram Founder Cedes to Police Requests About Users
  • The plight of Brazil's indigenous groups worsens
  • Politics
  • Will India's new government turbocharge the fight against poverty?
  • Tropical Storm Helene threatens the U.S., Mexico
  • Private tutoring is booming across poorer parts of Asia
  • Disney to Stop Using Slack Following Hack That Exposed Company Data
  • European millionaires seek a safe harbour from populism
  • What a $600m wedding says about India's attitude to wealth
  • Can António Costa make a success of the world's hardest political gig?
  • Xi Jinping is trying to love-bomb China's entrepreneurs
  • Under Lula, Brazil is walking on the financial wild side
  • SunRay Kelley wanted to build in rhythm with nature, his teacher
  • History will judge Joe Biden by Kamala Harris
  • The Middle East's bizarre waiting game: ceasefire or Armageddon?
  • Cheap fixes could help 450m people stand taller and think quicker
  • These Voters Are Anti-Trump, but Will They Be Pro-Harris?
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Business
  • Anne Innis Dagg devoted her life to the world's tallest creature
  • 'Drug-resistant typhoid is the final warning sign': disease spreads in Pakistan as antibiotics fail
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • Outrage at a strike in Rafah is unlikely to change policy
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • An apparent coup in Bolivia founders, but the country remains in trouble
  • The downfall of a Philippine mayor may be linked to Chinese gangs
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Central-bank digital currencies are talked about more than coming to fruition
  • How Brazilian lawmakers won extra powers to waste money
  • Book Review: How One Weird Rodent Ecologist Tried to Change the Fate of Humanity
  • These charts show how Britain's Tory party lost its way
  • "Homeland economics" will make the world poorer
  • Nike CEO John Donahoe Stepping Down After Rocky Tenure
  • Business
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Mapping the Marvel Universe in 6 Very Cool Charts
  • The mysterious middlemen helping Russia's war machine
  • PolyDrop - A BYOSI (Bring-Your-Own-Script-Interpreter) Rapid Payload Deployment Toolkit
  • A war correspondent's intimate portrait of an embattled minority
  • After 12 years of blood, Assad's Syria rejoins the Arab League
  • Microsoft's Three Mile Island Deal Signals a Broader Nuclear Comeback
  • What Really Happened While Filming Hodor's Fateful 'Game of Thrones' Scene
  • In the Philippines a decades-long conflict nears its endgame
  • How the last mammoths went extinct
  • A Sudanese gathering outside the country proposes a third way
  • Two new books explore the impact of accelerating technology
  • Why big oil is wading into lithium
  • A new bionic leg can be controlled by the brain alone
  • Panic rooms and private bunkers are all the rage in Germany
  • What Is Quantum Computing? The Complete WIRED Guide
  • Video: Busting globalisation myths
  • Alexei Navalny didn't just defy Putin—he showed up his depravity
  • Indian state capitalism looks to be in trouble
  • What if China and India became friends?
  • As his popularity fades Volodymyr Zelensky culls his cabinet
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Business
  • An Avalanche of Generative AI Videos Is Coming to YouTube Shorts
  • Why China takes young Tibetans from their families
  • The Most Vital Marvel Series Yet
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Disinformation is on the rise. How does it work?
  • At last, Wall Street has something to cheer
  • S8, Ep1: Rag'n'Bone Man, singer
  • Visa slapped with a DOJ antitrust lawsuit
  • China takes a step to curb anti-Japanese rhetoric online
  • Gretchen Whitmer would like to be America's first woman president
  • Is this a new age of warrior Japan?
  • Abu Dhabi's Masdar agrees second Spanish renewables deal this year
  • Ranajit Guha revolutionised the study of India's past
  • Sheikh Hasina faces her biggest crisis in years
  • Harris calls for end to Senate filibuster to restore US abortion rights
  • BookTok has passion—and enormous marketing power
  • What happens when it is too hot to work?
  • Indonesia's new capital is built on vanity
  • PIP-INTEL - OSINT and Cyber Intelligence Tool
  • Tell us: have you learned a new language from a TV show?
  • This week's covers
  • The ACLU Fights for Your Constitutional Right to Make Deepfakes
  • America's Ambitious Climate Plan Is Faltering
  • What if South Korea got a nuclear bomb?
  • Online Casino Workers Went on Hunger Strike Over Working Conditions
  • New Predatory Flatworm Invades Southern U.S.
  • Closing factories will not be enough to save Volkswagen
  • Roxie, one of China's few lesbian bars, closes its doors
  • How Asia's wild west shakes up the modern world
  • Why family empires dominate business in India
  • France's borrowing costs converge with Spain's as budget concerns grow
  • A new English version of "The Arabian Nights" is the first by a woman
  • The Germany-shaped void at Europe's heart
  • Business
  • A difficult new world
  • Baby formulas now share some ingredients with breast milk
  • How much trouble is Boeing in?
  • Math Puzzle: Find the Imposter Number
  • Three charts assess England's chances of winning the Euros 2024
  • Why a new art gallery in Bangalore is important for Indian science
  • A common food dye can make skin transparent
  • Crypto cowboys have found paradise in Paraguay
  • What Chipotle and McDonald's say about the consumer slowdown
  • A posthumous novel from John le Carré
  • Stop Rinsing After Brushing. Your Teeth Will Thank You
  • Russia's double-punch back against Ukraine's shock raid
  • The Xi-Putin partnership is not a marriage of convenience
  • The genocide case Israel faces is more about politics than the law
  • Big Tech Is Rushing to Find Clean Power to Fuel AI's Insatiable Appetite
  • The division of Cyprus looks indefinite
  • Did spies from China, India and Russia meddle in Canada's elections?
  • Near-shoring is turning eastern Europe into the new China
  • Taiwan braces for America's election
  • As payments systems go digital, they are changing global finance
  • Ángeles Flórez Peón, "Maricuela", made sure Spain did not forget its history
  • Hackers Threaten to Leak Planned Parenthood Data
  • Elmore Nickleberry pinned his hopes to Martin Luther King
  • The Morning After: SpaceX gets a surprising new enemy
  • Squeaky-clean Europe is more corrupt than you think
  • Helen Fisher found out the science behind romance
  • The 'Law of the Land' Has Been Replaced
  • How Vladimir Putin hopes to transform Russian trade
  • The wisdom in calling Donald Trump weird
  • This week's covers
  • Thailand's top court tramples over the country's democracy
  • How an English miner's daughter rose to work in the White House
  • Paris's stunning vision for the Olympics wins a gold medal
  • America is concerned about social media. China is, too
  • Why house prices are surging once again
  • The "effective altruism" movement is louder than it is large
  • What is The Economist's word of the year for 2021?
  • The systemic bias Kamala Harris must overcome in order to win
  • China is now the world leader in coffee shops
  • The Senate blocked aid for Ukraine. Now what?
  • Our new "mega-poll" gives Labour an expected majority of 280 seats
  • Donald Trump's promise of a golden age for oil is fanciful
  • A religious revolution is under way in the Middle East
  • Mexico's next president can reset relations with the United States
  • KAL's cartoon
  • How Chinese shoppers downgraded their ambition
  • Why Kamala Harris picked Tim Walz as her running-mate
  • Blighty newsletter: Labour is demolishing the Tories' pet projects
  • Usha Vance, wife of Donald Trump's VP pick, was once a Democrat
  • Late agony for Arsenal at Manchester City – Football Weekly podcast
  • Asia's most expensive cities, ranked
  • Early Prime Day deals include our favorite microSD card for 64 percent off
  • South Africa's foreign minister wants better relations with the West
  • How Ukraine's enemy is also learning lessons, albeit slowly
  • What Javier Milei could learn from Peru's economic successes
  • Xi Jinping worries that China's troops are not ready to fight
  • Blighty newsletter: Three takeaways from Starmer's first speech as prime minister
  • A short-term work visa shows the benefits of immigration
  • Politics
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • Kamala Harris leads Donald Trump in our nationwide poll tracker
  • How to make European industrial policy work
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Mystery of Deep-Ocean 'Biotwang' Sound Has Finally Been Solved
  • A threatened ports strike is already having an impact in America
  • The 44 Best Movies on Netflix Right Now (September 2024)
  • Is artificial intelligence making big tech too big?
  • Despite flaws, South Africa's democracy is stronger than its neighbours'
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • China unveils its new economic vision
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Sandra Day O'Connor specialised in breaking into male bastions
  • Lego Horizon Adventures hits PS5, PC and Switch on November 14
  • Javier Milei has turned Argentina into a libertarian laboratory
  • Here's What the 'Manosphere' Gets Wrong about Cuckoldry
  • How strongmen abuse tools for fighting financial crime
  • Joe Biden is missing in action
  • UFOs are going mainstream
  • Brian Niccol, Starbucks's new CEO, has a "messianic halo"
  • Best Cheap Vacuums for 2024
  • Starmer warns 'unpopular' decisions needed to 'fix' broken Britain
  • Narendra Modi ramps up the Muslim-baiting
  • The Hollywood Foreign Press Association does penance for its sins
  • New Cloudflare Tools Let Sites Detect and Block AI Bots for Free
  • Europe is bidding a steady farewell to passport-free travel
  • Uterus Transplants, Once Highly Experimental, Have Led to Dozens of Births
  • Three questions for Jay Powell
  • Science Crossword: Cosmic Goals
  • New Treatments Address Addiction alongside Trauma
  • Health-care reform is upending the lives of China's doctors
  • Death and destruction in a Russian city
  • Justice Department accuses Visa of stifling competition in the debit card business
  • Harris says she would support ending the filibuster to bring back Roe v. Wade
  • Nothing launches a slick pair of $149 open-ear headphones
  • Why Back-to-School Leads to More Crime
  • Robinhood Touts Rock-Bottom Fees for Options Trading. Then Come the Hidden Costs.
  • Politics
  • Can bonds keep beating stocks?
  • What German business makes of France's leftward turn
  • Zelensky Addresses the Security Council, Calling for Attention to Stay on Ukraine
  • Business
  • Counting Calories Is a Thing of the Past. Track This Key Health Metric Instead
  • Book Review: A Bold Profile of the James Webb Space Telescope
  • I cheated on my partner – and haven't told him. How can I forgive myself?
  • The Republicans' policy platform previews the coming campaign
  • Mattias Schoenaerts to Potentially Harm Dog as Supergirl Movie's Villain
  • Introducing El Boletín, our new weekly newsletter on Latin America
  • DockerSpy - DockerSpy Searches For Images On Docker Hub And Extracts Sensitive Information Such As Authentication Secrets, Private Keys, And More
  • Britain's budget choices are not as bad as the government says
  • Commercial ties between the Gulf and Asia are deepening
  • Israel's government is again trying to hobble its Supreme Court
  • Floods in England and a smashed artwork: photos of the day – Tuesday
  • Stephen Hawking Was Wrong—Extremal Black Holes Are Possible
  • The evolution of Britain's extreme right
  • Jacqueline Gold freed women to shamelessly enjoy themselves
  • KAL's cartoon
  • How the Philippines is turning the water-cannon on China
  • Just 4 days left to save up to $600 on TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 passes
  • What would Europe do if Trump won?
  • The self-help book began in the land of the stiff upper lip
  • McDonald's v Burger King: what a price war means for inflation
  • KKR Secures About a Third of Fuji Soft, Dousing Hopes of Bidding War
  • Shabana Mahmood, Britain's new Lord Chancellor
  • How China views the popular uprising in Bangladesh
  • The hidden life of Elizabeth Taylor – as seen by her son: 'Her love for Richard Burton never went away'
  • To see the future of urban warfare, look at Gaza
  • Is America approaching peak tip?
  • How hotels became targets for British rioters
  • Protesters Take to Apple Stores Worldwide on iPhone 16 Launch Day
  • Where does the UK's fast fashion end up? I found out on a beach clean in Ghana
  • Producing fake information is getting easier
  • Silvio Berlusconi duped Italians for years
  • Locust-busting is getting an upgrade
  • Italy's UniCredit Trades Blows With Berlin Over Commerzbank
  • Can Lula fix Brazil's fiscal mess?
  • A language guide for judges is a window into modern Britain
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • British voters care less about tax rises than politicians think
  • How to take proper breaks from work
  • Warner Music Increases Layoff Plans
  • Five charts compare Democrats and Republicans on job creation
  • Blighty newsletter: Labour changes Britain's policy towards Israel, carefully
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The Great Barrier Reef is seeing unprecedented coral bleaching
  • The far right has captured Israel's police
  • Phyllida Barlow had a lifetime of adventure making art
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Jerome Powell, chairman of the Federal Reserve
  • Taiwan wants to prove that it is serious about defence
  • Keir Starmer makes Gaza 'sausages' gaffe in Labour conference speech
  • Western values are steadily diverging from the rest of the world's
  • Micron Needs a New Memory Boost
  • China's low-fertility trap
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • How Starbucks caffeinates local economies
  • Reassessing Obama's biggest mistake
  • A net-zero world needs new markets and institutions
  • Proposed Ban Would Be a 'Death Sentence' for Chinese EVs in the US
  • What's an Influencer? The Complete WIRED Guide
  • The poisonous global politics of water
  • Sony Bravia 9 TV Review: Can LED Screens Get Much Better?
  • Mitt Romney Braces for Trump's Retribution
  • Kung fu gives Africans their kicks
  • America's elite universities are bloated, complacent and illiberal
  • Will artificial intelligence transform school?
  • For the Director of Wicked, There's No Place Like Silicon Valley
  • Augmented reality offers a safer driving experience
  • It is dangerously easy to hack the world's phones
  • Prime Day deals include three free months of Amazon Music Unlimited for new users
  • Why orange juice has never been more expensive
  • What Is Blockchain? The Complete WIRED Guide
  • Why chocolate is becoming much more expensive
  • Why people have fallen out of love with dating apps
  • How the financial system would respond to a superpower war
  • ChatGPT's New Voice Assistant Is Here to Creep You Out
  • Why Latin America is the world's trade pipsqueak
  • Business
  • Marvel Comics Still Doesn't Want Peter Parker Married Again
  • Israel has seen arms embargoes before
  • Meet the People Traveling the World, Thanks to Crowdfunding
  • Asus Zenbook S 14 Review: The Classiest Little Work Laptop I've Ever Used
  • X-Recon - A Utility For Detecting Webpage Inputs And Conducting XSS Scans
  • Watch out Beijing, China's second-tier cities are on the up
  • How Amos Vogel changed American film culture
  • Romania is now a magnet for the world's medical students
  • Politics
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Protesters Take to Apple Stores Worldwide on iPhone 16 Launch Day
  • OpenAI's X account was hacked to promote a crypto scam
  • Why the far-right AfD has been so successful in Germany – video explainer
  • Mary Quant launched the clothes that made the Sixties swing
  • How Many Dinosaur Species Roamed Earth? It's Surprisingly Hard to Know
  • The obesity capitals of the world
  • Politics
  • Book Review: Cryptography Is as Much an Art as a Science
  • Wines That Entertain as Well as Impress
  • Trump scapegoats migrants again at Georgia event meant to discuss economy
  • Researchers are figuring out how large language models work
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • A palatial museum of Edvard Munch's art opens in Oslo
  • Old tensions in New Caledonia: curfews and colonialism resurface on anniversary of French takeover
  • Zany ideas to slow polar melting are gathering momentum
  • Behind every Al Fayed or Diddy, there is a small army of enablers: this column is dedicated to them | Marina Hyde
  • Chase Savings Account Rates for September 2024
  • Sonic the Hedgehog Is Getting a DC Comic Book Run as the Justice League
  • China is sending escapers back to North Korea
  • This week's cover
  • She Made $10,000 a Month Defrauding Apps like Uber and Instacart. Meet the Queen of the Rideshare Mafia
  • The 27-Year-Old Billionaire Whose Army Does AI's Dirty Work
  • The world needs codes quantum computers can't break
  • Fresh Egypt arms shipment to Somalia raises regional tensions
  • How the Trump campaign has become more professional
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • 'Some men tend to jump straight to innuendoes': dating app users on why they quit
  • In 2021 our writers considered technology, meritocracy and the trans debate
  • How deep is Britain's fiscal "black hole"?
  • Danger in Donbas as Ukraine's front line falters
  • Life story
  • The world's population has reached 8bn. Don't panic
  • New batteries are stretchable enough to wear against the skin
  • Carbon-dioxide removal needs more attention
  • Bans on dog meat sweep across Asia
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • The 10 Best TVs We've Reviewed, Plus Buying Advice (2024)
  • What ilish, a fish, says about India-Bangladesh relations
  • After banning cinema for decades, Saudi Arabia is making movies
  • The Multiple Ways Climate Change Threatens to Make Migraines Worse
  • Israel has bloodied Hizbullah but is stuck in a war of attrition
  • BYOSI - Evade EDR's The Simple Way, By Not Touching Any Of The API's They Hook
  • The siesta is still a serious business in Europe's south
  • Everton takeover, Rodri blow and a Football League roundup - Football Weekly podcast
  • Commvault acquires data backup provider Clumio
  • Japan's sleepy companies still need more reform
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Argentina's Javier Milei denounces UN's 'socialist' agenda in speech
  • China unleashes stimulus blitz to lift growth
  • Colombia's first avowedly left-wing president is mired in scandal
  • What is behind China's perplexing bond-market intervention?
  • Is Ukraine losing the war against Russia?
  • A Game Designer Hid a Gold Trophy in the Woods. Let the Treasure Hunt Begin
  • India's largest airline is flying high
  • David Kirke believed safe sport repressed people's imaginations
  • Here's What Happens to Markets When Interest Rates Fall, in Charts
  • The Economist's glass-ceiling index
  • How to survive a superpower split
  • A gruesome corpse scandal sparks outrage in China
  • Can Samsung get its mojo back?
  • Peru's president survives because she's not in charge
  • The economics of American lotteries
  • David Banks, New York City's Schools Chancellor, to Resign
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Why companies get inflation wrong
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Myanmar's military junta is battered by Chinese-backed forces
  • Economic data, commodities and markets
  • Does Britain need a National Wealth Fund?
  • How China uses Russia to chew up the UN
  • KAL's cartoon
  • Why Chemistry, Physics and Medicine Nobel Prizes can be Shared, and How That Works
  • Politics
  • Tech Jobs Have Dried Up---and Aren't Coming Back Soon
  • Americans are wrong to wish for an era of stable bipartisanship
  • This week's cover
  • Therapy Sessions Exposed by Mental Health Care Firm's Unsecured Database
  • Why Ecuador risked global condemnation to storm Mexico's embassy
  • Sources and acknowledgments
  • Wanted: new business, finance and economics interns
  • Robots are suddenly getting cleverer. What's changed?
  • Rich countries could raise $5tn of climate finance a year, study says
  • The nationalism of ideas
  • Why so many Chinese graduates cannot find work
  • Meta Connect 2024: How to Watch and What to Expect
  • This week's cover
  • 4 Useful Slack Features You May not Be Using Yet
  • Israel is more popular than social-media posts suggest
  • Living in Lebanon: how have you been affected by the recent violence?
  • Should you send your children to private school?
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