rings MoonPay brings fiat balances to decentralized crypto By thepaypers.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 09:09:00 +0100 MoonPay, a crypto payments... Full Article
rings Camera brings unseen world to light By news.science360.gov Published On :: 2019-08-28T07:00:00Z Camera brings unseen world to light Full Article
rings Palm Springs Film Festival: A celebrity warm-up for Oscar By www.scpr.org Published On :: Mon, 05 Jan 2015 13:42:50 -0800 Actors Benedict Cumberbatch and Sophie Hunter arrive at the 26th Annual Palm Springs International Film Festival Film Festival Awards Gala at Palm Springs Convention Center on January 3, 2015 in Palm Springs, California.; Credit: Frazer Harrison/Getty Images R. H. GreeneThe 26th Annual Palm Springs International Film Festival opened this weekend, distinguished by robust audience turnouts, megawatt celebrity visitations and constant reminders of the unique space PSIFF occupies and the specialized services it provides to Hollywood. Falling as it does just before Sundance and just after the Golden Globes nominations, Palm Springs is as much a part of the awards season calendar as it is the festival circuit. Big ticket screenings are presented with all the photo op pomp that would greet a major world premiere at, say, the Los Angeles Film Festival, but in many cases this is to build buzz for (or to re-energize) films that are already in theaters. At Sundance or Tribeca, the suspense is usually about whether the films in competition will get good reviews and/or find distribution. At Palm Springs, especially on opening weekend, it's more about whether you'll run into Brad Pitt in the guest and industry suite at the Renaissance Hotel. At the PSIFF awards gala, Golden Globe nominee Reese Witherspoon took home the oddly gender specific Chairman's Award for her performance in "Wild." J.K. Simmons received something called a Spotlight Award for his superb turn as the menacing music instructor in "Whiplash." David Oyelowo grabbed the "Breakthrough Performance Award (Male)" for depicting Martin Luther King Jr. in "Selma." Brad Pitt's sing-along presentation of Oyelowo's award became the meme for much of the post-event press coverage. Sing-a-long with Brad Pitt Rosamund Pike got the "Breakthrough Performance Award (Female)" for "Gone Girl." Michael Keaton presented the Director of the Year award to his "Birdman" collaborator Alejandro G. Iñárritu. And the Palm Spring Convention Center stage was home to two young British heartthrobs who are in Oscar contention this year for period biopics about scientific genius: Eddie Redmayne, who grabbed the Desert Palm Achievement Award (Male) for portraying ALS sufferer Stephen Hawking in "The Theory of Everything," and Benedict Cumberbatch, who split glory with the cast of the Alan Turing biography "The Imitation Game" as co-winner of the Ensemble Performance Award. The Desert Palm Achievement Award (Female) went to Julianne Moore in the Alzheimer's drama "Still Alice." Every single one of the movies honored is in theaters now, almost all of them in the midst of slowly expanding release patterns as they mount their long slow march toward the Academy Awards. The generous "one award per movie" policy and the care with which PSIFF avoids alienating celebrity affections by giving out trophies with such blunt and unequivocal titles as "Best Actress" or "Best Actor" mark the PSIFF awards gala as a psuedo-event: a kind of open-armed Hollywood team huddle before things get grim and serious with the Oscar announcements at the end of the month. Even an Oscar-worthy oddity like Richard Linklater's "Boyhood" managed to find a place in the parade, with Linklater, who directed Shirley MacLaine in the 2010 black comedy "Bernie," presenting the 80-year-old actress with the Sonny Bono Visionary Award, essentially for career achievement. Meanwhile, the festival's generous supply of indie, studio and foreign movies churned away in various local movie theaters, a really quite remarkable cluster of buzzworthy pictures, almost all of which have played elsewhere, including at Sundance and Toronto and Tribeca, and in many cases at your local multiplex. This programming approach can be a double-edged sword. Director Ava DuVernay, whose civil rights-era epic "Selma" opened the festival, was unable to stay for her full run of Palm Springs personal appearances because her movie has been out long enough to spark a rather bitter controversy over its depiction of President Lyndon Johnson. DuVernay abandoned a Palm Springs Q and A in order to defend her film on Charlie Rose. While some audience members were bitterly disappointed at missing the chance to hear one of this year's golden ones, I'm sure the PSIFF Board of Governors understood completely. This time of year, you have to play the long game, and, in the words of the civil rights anthem, "keep your eyes on the prize." Off-Ramp contributor R.H. Greene, former editor of Boxoffice Magazine, is in Palm Spring this week to cover the 26th Annual Palm Springs International Film Festival. Look for his missives here, and listen Saturday to Off-Ramp for his report on the festival. This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
rings Palm Springs Film Festival: Patrick Stewart's comedic talent lights up 'Match' By www.scpr.org Published On :: Tue, 06 Jan 2015 12:31:14 -0800 Actors Carla Gugino, Matthew Lillard and Sir Patrick Stewart pose at the "Match" screening during the Palm Springs International Film Festival on January 3, 2015 in Palm Springs, California. ; Credit: Chelsea Lauren/Getty Images for PSIFF R.H. GreeneIs there a happier star in Hollywood than Patrick Stewart? Certainly no one seems to be having more fun than the onetime Star Trek captain and current (and seemingly permanent) X-Man. And why shouldn't Sir Patrick be pleased with himself? He really has got it all: a thriving stage profile in both New York and London, the unconditional love of a vast and loyal fan base, and a film career that oscillates freely between franchise blockbusters and the small, character-driven chamber pieces Stewart so clearly relishes. "Match" is about as small a movie as Stewart has ever appeared in: a well-intentioned three-character film studded with very funny dialogue courtesy of writer/director Stephen Belber, upon whose play "Match" is based. Stewart plays an aging gay dance instructor named Tobi Powell, who may or may not have sired a child back in the swinging 60s – an era movies now take to have been 10 years of uninterrupted orgy punctuated by Beatles records and gunshots aimed at the Kennedy brothers. As the saying goes, "If you can remember the '60s, you weren't there." Stewart's Tobi Powell was vibrantly there at the time, so it's perhaps natural that he can't seem to recall whether or not one of his rare couplings with a female partner might have had some unintended consequences. Mincing slightly and speaking in an accent that sounds Midwestern by way of Wales, Stewart is an absolute blast to watch. His genuine (and usually underutilized) flair for comedy is roguishly on display, allowing "Match" to shift between pathos and farce with an assurance born more of the performer's bravado than the emotional contours of Belber's somewhat overeager text. Though allegedly a bit of a shut-in, Tobi is a minor masterpiece of a lost and exuberant art form: the exaggerated star turn. It's unsurprising Frank Langella got a Tony nomination for playing him on Broadway a decade ago, and at least a bit unexpected that Stewart has gone completely unnoticed this awards season, even by the nomination-happy Golden Globes. Belber's best writing is mostly his comedic stuff. One aria comparing cunnilingus to knitting may just be the best scene of its type since Meg Ryan faked an orgasm in "When Harry Met Sally" a quarter century ago. Solid and believable supporting turns from Carla Gugino and Matthew Lillard add to the fun until Belber's script bogs down in the third act into the kind of paint-by-numbers epiphany shtick even TV has given up on at this point. WATCH: The official trailer for "Match," starring Patrick Stewart Everybody cries. Everybody changes. Everybody yawns. Or I did anyway. Still, go see this movie — or better yet, watch it on your phone, since it's shot almost entirely in close up — to see a grand and gracefully aging actor strut his stuff with contagious delight. You will definitely laugh, and, God, does this movie hope you'll also cry. But if you do weep, don't be surprised if, like Tobi himself, you hate yourself in the morning. Off-Ramp contributor R. H. Greene is covering the 26th Annual Palm Springs International Film Festival, where he recently saw the new comedy "Match" starring Patrick Stewart. "Match" comes to theaters and video-on-demand on Jan. 14. This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
rings Palm Springs Film Festival: Croatian 'Cowboys' wrangle laughs By www.scpr.org Published On :: Wed, 07 Jan 2015 06:00:25 -0800 A scene from Tomislav Mrisic's "Cowboys (Kauboji)," which screened at the Palm Springs Film Festival.; Credit: Kino films R.H. GreeneIt has escaped the average filmgoer's notice, but Eastern Europe has been in the midst of a cinematic renaissance for quite a while now. A few individual titles and filmmakers have bubbled to the surface in U.S. cinemas, including Danis Toanovic's Serbian antiwar satire "No Man's Land," which won an Oscar in 2001, and Cristian Mungiu's Romanian abortion drama "4 Months, 3 Weeks, and 2 Days," which nabbed the Palme d'Or at Cannes 2007. Those are both great movies, but they are also the small tip of a very large iceberg. This year, Estonian filmmaker Zaza Urushadze's "Tangerines" — a humanist drama about the Georgian civil war of 1992 — is a leading contender for a foreign film Oscar. As of now, its main competitor for the trophy would seem to be the Polish film "Ida" by Pawel Pawlikowski, which has taken most of the top critics prizes for foreign film this awards season. And who has heard of Radu Jude, the witty Romanian director of "The Happiest Girl in the World," or Kamen Kalev, Bulgaria's great hope for the cinematic future? Among so many others. A sort of "Waiting for Guffman" with a Croat twist, the delightful Croatian Oscar entry "Cowboys (Kauboji)" isn't in the same league as the best Eastern Europe has to offer, and in an odd way this is one of its strengths. Tomislav Mrisic's film utterly lacks pretension, which is not to say that it has no point to make. If there's an Eastern European precedent for "Cowboys'" assured mix of satire, drama and farce, it's probably the "Loves of a Blonde"-era Milos Forman. Mrisic shares with Forman an acute eye for the foibles of small town bureaucracy and a soft humanism that simultaneously allows "Cowboys" to embrace its rag-tag ensemble of eccentrics and to spoof them mercilessly. (A screen shot from Croation Oscar entry "Cowboys (Kauboji)") The plot sees Sasa (Sasa Anlokovic), a failed and hangdog theater director with health problems, returning to his small and economically desolate Croatian town, where he is enlisted by an old friend-turned-local-bureaucrat to bring Big City "culture" to the sticks. Aware that his lung cancer may have fallen out of remission and that time may be running out for him, Sasa sets about the task of creating what may be his last opus with the clay available to hand: a half dozen unskilled, uneducated and, in most cases, un-hygienic misfits, culled from the dregs of the town. They decide to create a Western stageplay based on their shared love of "Stagecoach," "High Noon" and John Wayne. Something decidedly unlike "Stagecoach" is the result. There are titters and belly laughs abounding in "Cowboys" — a film that may actually be even funnier to an American audience than it is in Croatia, given Mrisic's deft mangling of the worn-out genre cliches of old school horse opera. The performances are all solid and specific: This is no undifferentiated cluster of cliche yahoos, but rather a broadly drawn ensemble, in which each character has a specific logic and an unspoken need he or she is trying to fill. WATCH the "Cowboys" trailer in the original Croatian Mrisic finds much to mock in his small town provincials, but also much to celebrate. "Cowboys" is a smart film that still sees goodness everywhere it looks, which makes it a refreshing change not just from the American school of rote affirmation comedy but also from the relentless bleakness we associate with so much European fare. For all the farce on hand, "Cowboys" is in the end a covertly passionate defense of the creative act: Its imperishability and its importance for its own sake, excluding aesthetic considerations. It is also a plea for that hoary old chestnut, the healing power of laughter. While that may read like a cliche, with "Cowboys," Mrisic's point is made. Off-Ramp contributor R.H. Greene is covering the 26th Annual Palm Springs International Film Festival and will be posting regularly from there. This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
rings Anna Mastro's debut 'Walter' epitomizes Palm Springs Film Festival By www.scpr.org Published On :: Thu, 08 Jan 2015 12:46:47 -0800 Andrew J. West stars in Anna Mastro's "Walter"; Credit: "Walter" R.H. GreeneIt's always dicey to characterize a major film festival based on the movies you personally see there, because no matter how diligent you try to be, your impression will always be statistically anecdotal. I'll see perhaps 10 percent of the films at this year's Palm Springs International Film Festival by the time they roll up the red carpets for the final time, added to the 25 or so I'd watched before I got here, owing to the festival's unique programming policies. Not bad considering there are 190 movies being screened. So I think I've got the feel of things here. I wouldn't want my doctor to diagnose me based on a test with a 35 to 40 percent chance of accuracy, but I'm not a doctor. Instead of "Do no harm," I quote Spencer Tracy to myself. He said the secret to the creative process is to "just look 'em in the eye and tell 'em the truth." And the truth is, with the exception of a couple of documentaries and a horror movie, virtually every film I've seen at Palm Springs so far shared some obvious characteristics: the Palm Springs International Film Festival loves it some poignancy and affirmation. I've already commented on "Match," the Patrick Stewart acting showcase, and "Cowboys," a very funny Croatian comedy with cross-currents of seriousness. I may comment later about "Today," Iran's Oscar submission. (It's terrific by the way, a deeply affecting story about a burnt out cab driver who gets yanked into the world of a battered, unwed mother who steps into his cab.) (Still from "Today” (Emrooz) by Iranian filmmaker Reza Mirkarimi) I also saw an Anne Hathaway passion project called "Song One" here. I'm not going to write about it because I'm not in the mood to stomp on somebody else's butterfly. Plus the dramedy "1001 Grams" by the splendiferous-ly named Norwegian Bent Hamer, whose deadpan satire is routinely compared to Jacques Tati. WATCH the official trailer for "1001 Grams," which includes some foreign languages At their best, these are all movies that want to move the audience to tears before bouncing a ray of hope off the screen at them. At their worst, these movies are about pain in the same way Novocain is. They acknowledge its reality, in order to neutralize it. Filmmaker Anna Mastro's debut film "Walter" (one of the Palm Springs premieres) fits what seems to be the festival's programming model, too, and is, I think, a really quite appealing little indie film, with the by now familiar mildly magical realist bent. It's is a story about grief, though one with a screwball premise so that it doesn't quite present that way at first. Walter (portrayed with charisma and nuance by Andrew J. West) is a 20-something slacker, but a very uptight one, with a soldier's commitment to dress and routine. He still lives with mom (Virginia Madsen, now shifting toward the character actress portion of her career with ease and grace) and has a job one rung above fast food worker on the ladder of success: He's a ticket taker at the local multiplex. But what the world surely sees as failure, Walter knows to be his cover for a far more important vocation. Walter's father died when he was just 10 years old; ever since the funeral, Walter has realized something we don't: His real job in life is to decide where people go after they die. His snap judgments secretly send people to heaven or hell ... until a dead guy from Walter's past shows up and demands that Walter determine his fate, and then all hell breaks loose. It's an odd premise, bordering on the labored, but Mastro and her extremely appealing cast pull it off, in part by wearing their influences on their sleeves. The fingerprints of Wes Anderson are all over this picture, especially in terms of the way shots are framed and music is used, and I was able to identify the pivotal contribution of "Beasts of the Southern Wild" co-composer Dan Romer by ear, long before I noticed his screen credit. I suppose that's supposed to be a damning criticism of a first-timer, but I don't see it that way. Tarantino aped Scorsese for years and virtually remade a minor Hong Kong gangster picture when he debuted with "Reservoir Dogs." Spielberg acknowledges his debt to David Lean. Hitchcock's apprenticeship at Germany's UFA film studio resulted in a lifelong visual and thematic debt to the great Expressionist master Fritz Lang. The question is, what do you do with your influences, how do you make them your own? And Mastro — who has a real gift for casting, pacing a scene and maneuvering her actors easily between farce and seriousness — has her own talents. She understands how Anderson's visual syntax has become a cinematic shorthand for quirk, and she deploys it to that effect, then tells the story at hand. There are some issues with that story, though. There's a girl in concessions (Leven Rambin) Walter likes, and there's a bully at work. For all its surface oddity, the mechanical underpinnings of "Walter" frequently feel like they belong in an "American Pie" sequel. And yet this movie won me over. I liked its faith in the movie palace as a place that still vibrates with the marvelous. I found a dream sequence, where Rambin undresses to camera while sprawled on a rich yellow bed of movie house popcorn hilarious and deeply expressive. But I think my affection for this picture is mostly centered on Mastro and her cast, which includes a standout performance by Justin Kirk as a very grounded ghost and a broad but successful cameo from William H. Macy as Walter's psychiatrist. They're all groping toward something rather grim and real about loss, while doing their best to serve up some laughs and wonder along the way. It touched me, because it feels kind of wise. Off-Ramp contributor R.H. Greene, former editor of Boxoffice Magazine, is in Palm Spring this week to cover the 26th Annual Palm Springs International Film Festival. Look for his missives here, and listen Saturday at noon to Off-Ramp, when he'll interview Chaz Ebert about her late husband Roger Ebert's contributions to the film festival circuit. This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org. Full Article
rings Mountainside-Optum Partnership Brings Innovative Addiction Care to More Families By www.24-7pressrelease.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 08:00:00 GMT Mountainside, a leading holistic addiction treatment center in the Northeast, is in-network with Optum, expanding treatment access to a wider range of people in need. Full Article
rings Sonepar's North American Expansion Brings over $2B in Additional Revenue By www.24-7pressrelease.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 08:00:00 GMT Acquisition growth in 2024 includes 7 companies, 1700 new associates and 89 new branches Full Article
rings Red Magic 10 Pro Gaming Phone Brings The Boom With Snapdragon 8 Elite And A Huge Battery By hothardware.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 10:17:00 -0500 Smartphones powered by Qualcomm's Snapdragon 8 Elite beastmode chipset are beginning to trickle in. One of the first is the Nubia RedMagic 10 Pro series, launching initially in China this week with the international version arriving in December. These flagship gaming phones will be packed to the gills with big numbers and big specs at decent Full Article
rings ValCUN brings its MMP technology to Brainport Industry Campus - VoxelMatters By news.google.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 09:11:18 GMT ValCUN brings its MMP technology to Brainport Industry Campus VoxelMatters Full Article
rings ‘Lord of the Rings’ Owner Embracer Reports 10% Drop in Entertainment Sales, Blames Tolkien IP for ‘Lower Activity’ By variety.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 09:24:42 +0000 Embracer has reported disappointing results for the second quarter of 2024, reporting a large drop in net sales of 21% across the gaming group to SEK 8.6 billion ($782 million), with net sales of its entertainment and services also dropping by 10%. Adjusted operating profit fell by 33% to $109 million between July and September […] Full Article Global News Embracer Group Lord Of The Rings The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim
rings Supporters of Colorado Springs’ Black mayor faked burning cross, racist slur during 2023 campaign, feds allege By www.denverpost.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 17:57:30 +0000 Federal prosecutors say all three supporters worked together to spray-paint a racist slur aimed at Black people on a campaign sign for Mobolade on April 23, 2023, during the city's mayoral runoff election campaign Full Article Colorado News Courts Crime and Public Safety Latest Headlines News Colorado Springs Colorado Springs Police Department courts election FBI hate crime NAACP racism U.S. Attorney's Office
rings Jamal Campbell brings Zatanna ALL IN in new DC limited series By www.comicsbeat.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 16:15:31 +0000 The new ZATANNA miniseries finds DC's mistress of magic facing off against a new enemy. Full Article DC Top News ariana maher DC all in DC Comics jamal campbell Zatanna
rings Rachael Ray, 56, has no kids and says her dog brings her a 'ray of light' By biztoc.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 07:02:28 GMT Rachael Ray says she doesn't regret not having kids. John Lamparski/Getty Images for NYCWFF Rachael Ray says she doesn't regret not having kids even though she was "bashed for it" over the years. Instead, the celebrity chef said on her podcast that she prefers the company of her dog. And it's not… Full Article
rings Rachael Ray, 56, has no kids and says her dog brings her a 'ray of light' By www.businessinsider.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 06:49:16 +0000 "They never talk back, they always want to hug you," the celebrity chef said on her podcast. Full Article Parenting Entertainment pets parenthood rachel-ray
rings Coinbase Lists PEPE, Robinhood Brings Back Top Altcoins By readwrite.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 17:06:07 +0000 Coinbase has officially listed PEPE, marking a historic shift given the platform’s past controversy with the PEPE community. In May… Continue reading Coinbase Lists PEPE, Robinhood Brings Back Top Altcoins The post Coinbase Lists PEPE, Robinhood Brings Back Top Altcoins appeared first on ReadWrite. Full Article Cryptocurrency
rings CIQ Brings HPC, Linux Expertise, and Interactive Events to SC24 in Atlanta By www.hpcwire.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 00:38:23 +0000 ATLANTA, Nov. 13, 2024 — CIQ has announced its participation in SC24, set to take place next week in Atlanta. CIQ will be exhibiting in Booth #4131, where attendees can explore […] The post CIQ Brings HPC, Linux Expertise, and Interactive Events to SC24 in Atlanta appeared first on HPCwire. Full Article
rings 'Been waiting 46 years': Bruce Springsteen fans on fire for the Boss's 1st Winnipeg show By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 11:18:36 EST They weren't exactly dancing in the dark — more like shuffling in the pre-dawn chill to stay warm — but Bruce Springsteen fans in Winnipeg are most certainly in their glory days as the Boss is finally here. Full Article News/Canada/Manitoba
rings Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew brings 3 new ministers into cabinet in minor shuffle By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 11:25:48 EST Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew is shuffling his cabinet just over a year after his government was sworn in, creating new departments and assigning new responsibilities to ministers already in cabinet. Full Article News/Canada/Manitoba
rings Yeh Kaali Kaali Ankhein Season 2 Trailer Released, Brings New Levels of Danger and Obsession By www.gadgets360.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 22:49:14 +0530 The trailer for Yeh Kaali Kaali Ankhein Season 2, now out on Netflix, hints at a gripping continuation of the dark thriller, as the show returns with even higher stakes. With new characters and dramatic tension, the series dives deeper into themes of love, power, and revenge. Fans are eagerly anticipating the season’s release on November 22, with high expectations for a storyline packed with unexpected twists and deadly consequences. Full Article
rings Italy's 12th century Castle Revival Brings Luxury To Umbrian Countryside By www.ndtv.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 11:03:04 +0530 Umbria's Castle of Antognolla will soon transform into a Six Senses luxury resort. Full Article
rings Italy's 12th century Castle Revival Brings Luxury To Umbrian Countryside By www.ndtv.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 12:02:42 +0530 Umbria's Castle of Antognolla will soon transform into a Six Senses luxury resort. Full Article
rings Fans can attend the red carpet for The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim World Premiere in London on Dec 3 By www.theonering.net Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 21:36:04 +0000 On Tuesday December 3, London's iconic Leicester Square will host the World Premiere of the feature-length anime The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim ahead of the general film's release on December 13 (note: some locations, such as Japan, are actually getting it a little later). There will be a slew of cast and crew from the film in attendance: Brian Cox, Gaia Wise, and Laurence Ubong Williams, as well as director Kenji Kamiyama, producers Philippa Boyens, Jason DeMarco, and Joseph Chou, and singer Paris Paloma. Carlos Laloli, Peter Jackson, Ken Kamis, Sam Register, Phoebe Gittins and Arty Papageorgiou will also be there. Warner Bros. says it will be setting setting up a an area for a "limited number of fans to watch the red carpet arrivals". Warner Bros. also say they are setting up a ballot, and are taking applications for double passes. Applications will close at 23:59 GMT Wednesday 20th November and winners will be drawn at random. Click here to apply for access to the GENERAL ACCESS FAN AREA Click here to apply for access to the ACCESSIBLE FAN AREA In addition, there will be a live stream of the red carpet with details to be announced soon. Stay tuned, I guess! Source: Warner Bros. Full Article Events Philippa Boyens Premieres Studios The War of the Rohirrim Warner Bros. leicester square London The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim world premiere
rings Google Brings Back Archived Page Links By www.infopackets.com Published On :: Mon, 16 Sep 2024 17:24:00 +0000 Google is to make it easier to find copies of pages that are no longer available on websites. The change comes several months after Google removed its own cache of web pages. Users will instead be able to follow a link to the archived copy at the Internet Archive's "wayback machine." Before this year, many Google search results included a link to Google's own cached copies of web pages. These were the copies that Google made when scanning a web page for content and links to help decide when and where it should appear in search rankings. The cached copy available in the search results would ... (view more) Full Article
rings “Extreemrechtse samenzweringstheorieën worden er gepromoot”: Britse krant ‘The Guardian’ plaatst geen info meer op X - Het Laatste Nieuws By news.google.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 14:18:39 GMT “Extreemrechtse samenzweringstheorieën worden er gepromoot”: Britse krant ‘The Guardian’ plaatst geen info meer op X Het Laatste NieuwsHele verhaal bekijken via Google Nieuws Full Article
rings Formatie federale regering | Vooruit houdt boot af voor regeringsonderhandelingen - De Tijd By news.google.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 15:59:49 GMT Formatie federale regering | Vooruit houdt boot af voor regeringsonderhandelingen De TijdWaarom hint De Wever op nieuwe verkiezingen? Carl Devos: “Wiskundig gezien is een regering zonder N-VA wél mogelijk” Het Laatste NieuwsAndere formule, zelfde ingrediënten? De Wever zet door met ‘Arizona-coalitie’ De StandaardFormatie: ‘Bart De Wever voert een toneeltje op’ Knack.be“We riskeren in een uitzichtloze politieke crisis terecht te komen”: De Wever krijgt twee weken extra om Arizona te redden, maar heeft dat kans op slagen? Het Nieuwsblad Full Article
rings Fresh bread brings openness By www.om.org Published On :: Fri, 29 Jul 2016 02:23:15 +0000 An OMer in Turkey who likes to bake is able to bless her neighbours in their apartment block. Full Article
rings 21st Century technology brings truth closer By www.om.org Published On :: Fri, 21 Apr 2017 13:45:23 +0000 A new partner ministry broadcasting Urdu-speaking programmes to 360+ million who speak it, is giving them hope for eternity. Full Article
rings Worship event brings churches together By www.om.org Published On :: Fri, 20 Dec 2013 09:25:38 +0000 Believers from different nations and denominations gathered to worship God together in Athens, promoting unity amongst the city’s believers. Full Article
rings Tragic accident brings salvation to village By www.om.org Published On :: Wed, 12 Oct 2011 13:14:42 +0000 A Roma man’s cry to God for mercy to spare his son’s life transforms his future and the future of his small town. Full Article
rings Outreach team brings hope to a young man By www.om.org Published On :: Mon, 20 Jan 2014 13:00:58 +0000 During a three week outreach in November, OM Italy speaks to the heart of a young man called Antonio. Full Article
rings OM team brings the Saviour to people in Perquín By www.om.org Published On :: Mon, 31 Oct 2011 13:09:58 +0000 A team of 38 from El Salvador and Guatemala visited the Salvadoran city of Perquín to spread the message of the Saviour. Full Article
rings It rings a bell… By www.om.org Published On :: Thu, 24 May 2018 22:09:48 +0000 Cartagena, Colombia :: Logos Hope’s longer-serving volunteers recall the first gift presented to the vessel as they mark her entry into service in 2009. Full Article
rings Homo progressivus - The Energetic Overcome - With a Little Help from Bruce Springsteen, Ludwig van Beethoven & ... around the World in 200 Festival-Days By www.prleap.com Published On :: Wed, 30 Oct 2024 06:10:00 PDT In the week before the US presidential election on 5 November 2024, it is the artists who are calling the tune impulsive, powerful and mighty, as only music can be. Full Article
rings Siloam Springs, AR Author Publishes Biography By www.prleap.com Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:00:00 PST How Much Did His Actions Impact The Poultry Industry. Full Article
rings 2020 brings higher labor costs for small businesses By www.small-business-software.net Published On :: Wed, 15 Jan 2020 19:27:17 -0500 As of Jan. 1, there are higher minimum wages in a quarter of the states, and new federal overtime rules. The IRS has new W-4 forms owners will need to get used to. Plastic bags are on their way out at stores and other businesses in a growing number of places around the country. And California has new laws on freelancers and consumer privacy that can affect out-of-state companies. A look at a handful of the 2020 changes in federal, state and local laws and regulations: complete article Full Article
rings Strings for the Deaf, The String Quartet Tribute to Queens of the Stone Age By www.resurrectionsong.com Published On :: 2005-03-07T13:33:03-07:00 Compulsive purchases are so often wrong that I nearly put this one back on the shelf. I'm glad I didn't.... Full Article
rings LXer: CachyOS ISO Release for September 2024 Brings Linux Kernel 6.11 and Optimizations By www.linuxquestions.org Published On :: Mon, 30 Sep 2024 09:02:01 GMT Published at LXer: The Arch Linux-based and KDE Plasma-focused CachyOS distribution has a new ISO release for September 2024 adding various performance improvements and optimizations across the... Full Article Syndicated Linux News
rings LXer: Linux 6.12 x86 Platform Drivers Brings Improvements For Laptops Plus Intel ELC By www.linuxquestions.org Published On :: Mon, 30 Sep 2024 18:11:22 GMT Published at LXer: The x86 platform driver changes that were merged last week for the Linux 6.12 kernel continue to be quite lively with changes for enhancing Linux laptop support along with other... Full Article Syndicated Linux News
rings LXer: GNOME 47 brings back some customization options, but let's not go crazy By www.linuxquestions.org Published On :: Tue, 01 Oct 2024 05:12:01 GMT Published at LXer: The latest release of the de facto default desktop of most Linux distros brings some new features � but the GNOME 4x transition isn't done yet. GNOME 47 was released last week,... Full Article Syndicated Linux News
rings LXer: Audacious 4.4.1 Open-Source Audio Player Brings New Features and Improvements By www.linuxquestions.org Published On :: Tue, 01 Oct 2024 21:03:02 GMT Published at LXer: The Audacious open-source audio player, a descendant of the XMMS media player, has been updated to version 4.4.1, a release that introduces several new features and improvements.... Full Article Syndicated Linux News
rings Nevada grand jury brings indictments against alternate electors in 2020 election By legitgov.org Published On :: Thu, 07 Dec 2023 06:45:51 +0000 Nevada grand jury brings indictments against alternate electors in 2020 election | 6 Dec 2023 | A grand jury convened by Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford has brought felony indictments against six individuals who served as alternate electors after the 2020 election as the Trump campaign worked to secure recounts to verify the results of […] Full Article
rings Floor Coverings Quote Received By www.timesheetsmts.com Published On :: 2006-10-05T12:02:42+09:30 We've decided to go with hard floor coverings (tiles or floorboards) in the living areas of the home and carpets only in the bedrooms. This will wear better if we decide to rent the property. We got a quote back today for this: $1600 for carpets $4400 for tiling/floorboards Total Cost: $6000 When we get closer to the house being actually built we'll decide on the actual floor covering we want. Full Article
rings Sterling Silver Jewelry, Cubic Zirconia CZ Rings, Necklaces, Bracelets and Pendants, Earrings, Fashion Watches and Jewelry Gifts For Men. By www.RSStop10.com.evesaddiction.php Published On :: Tue, 18 July 2006 00:00:00 +0530 Our huge selection of sterling silver jewelry includes sterling silver necklaces, rings, bracelets and pendants. Most of our sterling silver jewelry is designer and celebrity inspired. We also offer cubic zirconia cz jewelry at affordable rates. Full Article
rings SAP And Microsoft Collaborate On Joint Generative AI Offerings To Help Customers Address The Talent Gap By www.hostreview.com Published On :: Today, SAP SE announced the next step in its long-standing partnership with Microsoft, using the latest in enterprise-ready generative AI innovation to help solve customers' most fundamental business challenges. The companies will collaborate on integrating SAPamp;reg;SuccessFactorsamp;reg; solutions with Microsoft 365 Copilot and Copilot in Viva Learning, as well as Microsoft's AzureOpenAI Service to access powerful language models that analyze and generate natural language. The integrations will enable new experiences designed to improve how organizations attract, retain and skill their people. Full Article
rings TNM brings in online ticketing only for Super League matches By www.telecompaper.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 11:25:00 +0100 (Telecompaper) Malawian operator TNM and League of Malawi (SULOM) have jointly announced 100 percent electronic ticketing for all matches beginning 01 December... Full Article
rings Telus brings speeds of 1.5 Gbps to Ontario, Quebec, backed by PureFibre By www.telecompaper.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 11:02:00 +0100 (Telecompaper) Canadian operator Telus has introduced download and upload speeds of 1.5 Gbps and 1.0 Gbps, respectively, in Ontario and Quebec, backed by its PureFibre Internet service... Full Article
rings iOS 18.1 Brings This Helpful Tool to Your iPhone Calls By www.cnet.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 12:00:06 +0000 Phone call recordings and transcripts are a few taps away. Full Article
rings Android 15 QPR2 brings the newest Linux kernel to all tensor-powered phones and tablets - Android Police By news.google.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 02:23:00 GMT Android 15 QPR2 brings the newest Linux kernel to all tensor-powered phones and tablets Android PoliceHere’s everything new in Android 15 QPR2 Beta 1 [Gallery] 9to5GoogleYour Google Pixel Phone's Newest Android 15 Beta Update Arrived Droid LifeGoogle is preparing to bring back a beloved customization feature from Android 11 Android AuthorityAndroid 15 QPR2 beta 1 release includes major upgrade for Tensor-powered Pixels PhoneArena Full Article
rings BMW brings the M2 to India By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 09 Jun 2023 12:59:30 +0530 Full Article Motoring