ba Battlefield 2042 adds five specialists in wake of beta feedback By www.bit-tech.net Published On :: Fri, 22 Oct 2021 10:00:00 +0000 Doubled number of specialists should make up for the switch from the classic class system. Full Article
ba Engineered bacteria destroy antibiotic resistance DNA in wastewater By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Thu, 22 Aug 2024 23:44:04 +0100 Wastewater is a major reservoir for antibiotic resistance genes, but modified bacteria can chop up this DNA before the dangerous microbes reach people Full Article
ba Will mpox become a global pandemic like covid-19? By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Tue, 27 Aug 2024 15:50:26 +0100 A new variant of mpox is surging in Central Africa, raising concerns about how quickly it could spread further afield Full Article
ba How bad is modern life for our body clocks – and what can we do? By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Wed, 18 Sep 2024 19:00:00 +0100 Modern life disrupts the circadian rhythms controlling our biology – increasing our risk of developing conditions ranging from diabetes to dementia. Lynne Peeples's new book The Inner Clock explores and offers solutions Full Article
ba The remarkable science-backed ways to get fit as fast as possible By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Mon, 22 Jul 2024 17:00:14 +0100 A better understanding of what happens to our bodies when we get fitter can unlock ways to speed up the journey – and it might be simpler than you think Full Article
ba Can we finally reverse balding with these new experimental treatments? By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Tue, 26 Sep 2023 17:00:00 +0100 Male pattern baldness could soon be a thing of the past, with new hair loss treatments beginning to show tantalising results Full Article
ba How bad is vaping for your health? We’re finally getting answers By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Wed, 06 Dec 2023 14:00:00 +0000 As more of us take up vaping and concerns rise about the long-term effects, we now have enough data to get a grip on the health impact – and how it compares to smoking Full Article
ba Can we really balance our hormones by eating certain foods? By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Wed, 30 Oct 2024 13:00:00 +0000 Diets that claim to control excess oestrogen or stress hormones are all the rage on Instagram and TikTok. They could be good for us, just not for the reasons claimed Full Article
ba Conspiracy theorists are turning their attention back to HPV vaccines By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2024 18:00:00 +0000 We are living in a vaccine-hesitant moment, with conspiracy theories thriving on social media. We need to push back, says Simon Williams Full Article
ba Israeli leader tells Biden 'we have to get hostages back' who are 'going through hell in dungeons of Gaza' By www.foxnews.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 14:13:17 -0500 Israeli President Isaac Herzog says hostages are "going through hell in the dungeons of Gaza" during meeting with President Biden at White House. Full Article 338ac2a7-ac44-5ca0-8150-4a2aada67f5d fnc Fox News fox-news/world/world-regions/israel fox-news/person/joe-biden fox-news/politics/executive/white-house fox-news/politics/foreign-policy fox-news/world/conflicts fox-news/world/world-regions/middle-east fox-news/world fox-news/politics article
ba Trump nominates Mike Huckabee for US ambassador to Israel By www.foxnews.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 13:53:16 -0500 President-elect Trump is nominating former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee to be the U.S. ambassador to Israel, he announced Tuesday in a social media post. Full Article c0523d5b-2a0b-5fed-b8be-36cbfe6a55a9 fnc Fox News fox-news/politics/elections/presidential/trump-transition fox-news/politics/executive/white-house fox-news/politics fox-news/person/donald-trump fox-news/world/world-regions/israel fox-news/politics article
ba Voters across the country decide on state ballot measures By www.foxnews.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 18:54:44 -0500 While many states focused on issues like abortion and immigration throughout this election cycle, voters in California and Colorado approved tougher crime laws. Full Article ebad90d5-8234-502e-8d58-7ebb010d2b66 fnc Fox News fox-news/politics/elections fox-news/politics/voting fox-news/us/us-regions/west/california fox-news/us/us-regions/west/colorado fox-news/us/crime fox-news/great-outdoors/hunting fox-news/politics article
ba Domino’s Pizza customers may have been exposed to typhoid fever bacteria By www.foodsafetynews.com Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 21:41:22 +0000 Health officials in Saskatchewan Canada are urging customers of Domino’s Pizza in Martensville to watch for symptoms of typhoid fever. The restaurant’s customers may have been exposed to Salmonella typhi, also known as typhoid fever. Anyone who consumed food or drink from the Domino’s store at 717 Centennial Drive South... Continue Reading Full Article Foodborne Pathogens For Consumers World Canada Domino's Pizza typhoid fever
ba Battle of The Stuffing: Stove Top Versus Homemade By viralnova.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 03:28:51 +0000 When it’s time to make stuffing, whether it’s for Thanksgiving or any other meal, you have a decision to make. Do you make homemade stuffing or go for the shortcut and buy Stove Top? It comes down to the ease of making something right out of a box versus the satisfaction of making the perfect […] Full Article Life
ba Betsy DeVos joins Trump’s call to 'disband' the Department of Education and 're-empower' families By www.foxnews.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 20:40:40 -0500 Former Education Secretary Betsy DeVos discusses what a second Trump term could mean for U.S. education on "The Story with Martha MacCallum." Full Article 2426f898-56cb-51b3-9650-47f0ef4cf50e fnc Fox News fox-news/media fox-news/topic/fox-news-flash fox-news/us/education/dept-of-education fox-news/politics/elections/presidential/trump-transition fox-news/shows/v-full-ep-the-story fox-news/media article
ba Mark Cuban runs to 'less hateful' social media platform after scrubbing X account of Harris support By www.foxnews.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 20:50:55 -0500 Dallas Mavericks minority owner Mark Cuban returned to the Bluesky social media platform with a post after weeks of contentious X posts. Full Article 03659cc7-b9b2-59bb-a83a-a51c4f033588 fnc Fox News fox-news/sports/nba/dallas-mavericks fox-news/sports/nba fox-news/sports fox-news/politics fox-news/sports article
ba Georgia on outside of College Football Playoff bracket as wild week brings rankings shakeup By www.foxnews.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 21:52:18 -0500 Georgia's loss to Ole Miss Saturday brought a wild shakeup to the college football rankings, and the Bulldogs find themselves out of the playoff picture. Full Article be1a5b1e-e9fd-515d-8deb-af99e8d76913 fnc Fox News fox-news/sports/ncaa-fb fox-news/sports/ncaa fox-news/sports fox-news/sports/ncaa/georgia-bulldogs fox-news/sports/ncaa/oregon-ducks fox-news/sports article
ba Senator-elect Jim Justice's team clarifies report claiming famous pooch Babydog banned from Senate floor By www.foxnews.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 22:34:44 -0500 Senator-elect Jim Justice's office has clarified reports that his famous pooch Babydog was banned from the Senate floor, saying Justice never intended to bring the dog onto the floor. Full Article 5e83cc3c-0f20-531a-a467-f5c5e2547352 fnc Fox News fox-news/politics fox-news/politics/senate fox-news/politics/elections/senate fox-news/us/us-regions/southeast/west-virginia fox-news/politics article
ba Country star Darius Rucker donates to ETSU’s NIL fund after 'awkward' appearance at football game By www.foxnews.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 23:00:30 -0500 Country music star Darius Rucker paid the East Tennessee State University's NIL fund $10 for every minute he was on the field Saturday after what he called an "awkward" appearance. Full Article 322459dc-7f98-5929-8f3a-c2c829efc988 fnc Fox News fox-news/sports/ncaa/east-tennessee-state-buccaneers fox-news/sports/ncaa fox-news/sports fox-news/topic/trending-news fox-news/sports article
ba Dolphins' Tyreek Hill floats latest theory about arrest near NFL stadium amid battle with wrist injury By www.foxnews.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 00:01:50 -0500 In the first quarter of Monday's Dolphins-Rams game, ESPN reported that Tyreek Hill said a torn ligament in his wrist became worst after he was detained by police. Full Article 62bb1d69-5e1c-51c7-ae39-4516d9fff977 fnc Fox News fox-news/sports/nfl/miami-dolphins fox-news/sports/nfl fox-news/person/tyreek-hill fox-news/sports fox-news/sports article
ba Agencies tight-lipped on kickbacks By www.theaustralian.com.au Published On :: Sun, 12 Jun 2016 14:00:00 GMT Australia’s leading media agencies have ducked questions about cash kickbacks. Full Article
ba Delta puts Nine back in ratings By www.theaustralian.com.au Published On :: Sun, 12 Jun 2016 14:00:00 GMT Delta Goodrem and her revolving chair have proved their star power, helping to reverse Nine’s horror start to the year. Full Article
ba The Patent Battle That Won’t Quit By spectrum.ieee.org Published On :: Mon, 28 Oct 2024 21:00:03 +0000 Just before this special issue on invention went to press, I got a message from IEEE senior member and patent attorney George Macdonald. Nearly two decades after I first reported on Corliss Orville “Cob” Burandt’s struggle with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, the 77-year-old inventor’s patent case was being revived. From 1981 to 1990, Burandt had received a dozen U.S. patents for improvements to automotive engines, starting with his 1990 patent for variable valve-timing technology (U.S. Patent No. 4,961,406A). But he failed to convince any automakers to license his technology. What’s worse, he claims, some of the world’s major carmakers now use his inventions in their hybrid engines. Shortly after reading my piece in 2005, Macdonald stepped forward to represent Burandt. By then, the inventor had already lost his patents because he hadn’t paid the US $40,000 in maintenance fees to keep them active. Macdonald filed a petition to pay the maintenance fees late and another to revive a related child case. The maintenance fee petition was denied in 2006. While the petition to revive was still pending, Macdonald passed the maintenance fee baton to Hunton Andrews Kurth (HAK), which took the case pro bono. HAK attorneys argued that the USPTO should reinstate the 1990 parent patent. The timing was crucial: If the parent patent was reinstated before 2008, Burandt would have had the opportunity to compel infringing corporations to pay him licensing fees. Unfortunately, for reasons that remain unclear, the patent office tried to paper Burandt’s legal team to death, Macdonald says. HAK could go no further in the maintenance-fee case after the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear it in 2009. Then, in 2010, the USPTO belatedly revived Burandt’s child continuation application. A continuation application lets an inventor add claims to their original patent application while maintaining the earlier filing date—1988 in this case. However, this revival came with its own set of challenges. Macdonald was informed in 2011 that the patent examiner would issue the patent but later discovered that the application was placed into a then-secret program called the Sensitive Application Warning System (SAWS) instead. While touted as a way to quash applications for things like perpetual-motion machines, the SAWS process effectively slowed action on Burandt’s case. After several more years of motions and rulings, Macdonald met IEEE Member Edward Pennington, who agreed to represent Burandt. Earlier this year, Pennington filed a complaint in the Eastern District of Virginia seeking the issuance of Burandt’s patent on the grounds that it was wrongfully denied. As of this writing, Burandt still hasn’t seen a dime from his inventions. He subsists on his social security benefits. And while his case raises important questions about fairness, transparency, and the rights of individual inventors, Pennington says his client isn’t interested in becoming a poster boy for poor inventors. “We’re not out to change policy at the patent office or to give Mr. Burandt a framed copy of the patent to say, ‘Look at me, I’m an inventor,’ ” says Pennington. “This is just to say, ‘Here’s a guy that would like to benefit from his idea.’ It just so happens that he’s pretty much in need. And even the slightest royalty would go a long ways for the guy.” Full Article Climate change Climate tech Hybrid cars uspto Intellectual property Inventors Patents
ba Multiband Antenna Simulation and Wireless KPI Extraction By www.ansys.com Published On :: Tue, 29 Oct 2024 13:07:30 +0000 In this upcoming webinar, explore how to leverage the state-of-the-art high-frequency simulation capabilities of Ansys HFSS to innovate and develop advanced multiband antenna systems. OverviewThis webinar will explore how to leverage the state-of-the-art high-frequency simulation capabilities of Ansys HFSS to innovate and develop advanced multiband antenna systems. Attendees will learn how to optimize antenna performance and analyze installed performance within wireless networks. The session will also demonstrate how this approach enables users to extract valuable wireless and network KPIs, providing a comprehensive toolset for enhancing antenna design, optimizing multiband communication, and improving overall network performance. Join us to discover how Ansys HFSS can transform wireless system design and network efficiency approach. What Attendees will LearnHow to design interleaved multiband antenna systems using the latest capabilities in HFSSHow to extract Network Key Performance IndicatorsHow to run and extract RF Channels for the dynamic environment Who Should Attend This webinar is valuable to anyone involved in antenna, R&D, product design, and wireless networks.Register now for this free webinar! Full Article Antennas Multiband Type:webinar Wireless networks
ba Touchscreens Are Out, and Tactile Controls Are Back By spectrum.ieee.org Published On :: Sun, 03 Nov 2024 14:00:03 +0000 Tactile controls are back in vogue. Apple added two new buttons to the iPhone 16, home appliances like stoves and washing machines are returning to knobs, and several car manufacturers are reintroducing buttons and dials to dashboards and steering wheels. With this “re-buttonization,” as The Wall Street Journal describes it, demand for Rachel Plotnick’s expertise has grown. Plotnick, an associate professor of cinema and media studies at Indiana University in Bloomington, is the leading expert on buttons and how people interact with them. She studies the relationship between technology and society with a focus on everyday or overlooked technologies, and wrote the 2018 book Power Button: A History of Pleasure, Panic, and the Politics of Pushing (The MIT Press). Now, companies are reaching out to her to help improve their tactile controls.Rachel Plotnick on...Researching the history of buttonsThe renaissance of physical controlsWorking with companies on “re-buttoning”You wrote a book a few years ago about the history of buttons. What inspired that book?Rachel Plotnick: Around 2009, I noticed there was a lot of discourse in the news about the death of the button. This was a couple years after the first iPhone had come out, and a lot of people were saying that, as touchscreens were becoming more popular, eventually we weren’t going to have any more physical buttons to push. This started to happen across a range of devices like the Microsoft Kinect, and after films like Minority Report had come out in the early 2000s, everyone thought we were moving to this kind of gesture or speech interface. I was fascinated by this idea that an entire interface could die, and that led me down this big wormhole, to try to understand how we came to be a society that pushed buttons everywhere we went. Rachel Plotnick studies the ways we use everyday technologies and how they shape our relationships with each other and the world.Rachel PlotnickThe more that I looked around, the more that I saw not only were we pressing digital buttons on social media and to order things from Amazon, but also to start our coffee makers and go up and down in elevators and operate our televisions. The pervasiveness of the button as a technology pitted against this idea of buttons disappearing seemed like such an interesting dichotomy to me. And so I wanted to understand an origin story, if I could come up with it, of where buttons came from.What did you find in your research?Plotnick: One of the biggest observations I made was that a lot of fears and fantasies around pushing buttons were the same 100 years ago as they are today. I expected to see this society that wildly transformed and used buttons in such a different way, but I saw these persistent anxieties over time about control and who gets to push the button, and also these pleasures around button pushing that we can use for advertising and to make technology simpler. That pendulum swing between fantasy and fear, pleasure and panic, and how those themes persisted over more than a century was what really interested me. I liked seeing the connections between the past and the present.[Back to top]We’ve experienced the rise of touchscreens, but now we might be seeing another shift—a renaissance in buttons and physical controls. What’s prompting the trend?Plotnick: There was this kind of touchscreen mania, where all of a sudden everything became a touchscreen. Your car was a touchscreen, your refrigerator was a touchscreen. Over time, people became somewhat fatigued with that. That’s not to say touchscreens aren’t a really useful interface, I think they are. But on the other hand, people seem to have a hunger for physical buttons, both because you don’t always have to look at them—you can feel your way around for them when you don’t want to directly pay attention to them—but also because they offer a greater range of tactility and feedback. If you look at gamers playing video games, they want to push a lot of buttons on those controls. And if you look at DJs and digital musicians, they have endless amounts of buttons and joysticks and dials to make music. There seems to be this kind of richness of the tactile experience that’s afforded by pushing buttons. They’re not perfect for every situation, but I think increasingly, we’re realizing the merit that the interface offers.What else is motivating the re-buttoning of consumer devices?Plotnick: Maybe screen fatigue. We spend all our days and nights on these devices, scrolling or constantly flipping through pages and videos, and there’s something tiring about that. The button may be a way to almost de-technologize our everyday existence, to a certain extent. That’s not to say buttons don’t work with screens very nicely—they’re often partners. But in a way, it’s taking away the priority of vision as a sense, and recognizing that a screen isn’t always the best way to interact with something. When I’m driving, it’s actually unsafe for my car to be operated in that way. It’s hard to generalize and say, buttons are always easy and good, and touchscreens are difficult and bad, or vice versa. Buttons tend to offer you a really limited range of possibilities in terms of what you can do. Maybe that simplicity of limiting our field of choices offers more safety in certain situations.It also seems like there’s an accessibility issue when prioritizing vision in device interfaces, right?Plotnick: The blind community had to fight for years to make touchscreens more accessible. It’s always been funny to me that we call them touchscreens. We think about them as a touch modality, but a touchscreen prioritizes the visual. Over the last few years, we’re seeing Alexa and Siri and a lot of these other voice-activated systems that are making things a little bit more auditory as a way to deal with that. But the touchscreen is oriented around visuality.It sounds like, in general, having multiple interface options is the best way to move forward—not that touchscreens are going to become completely passé, just like the button never actually died. Plotnick: I think that’s accurate. We see paradigm shifts over time with technologies, but for the most part, we often recycle old ideas. It’s striking that if we look at the 1800s, people were sending messages via telegraph about what the future would look like if we all had this dashboard of buttons at our command where we could communicate with anyone and shop for anything. And that’s essentially what our smartphones became. We still have this dashboard menu approach. I think it means carefully considering what the right interface is for each situation. [Back to top]Several companies have reached out to you to learn from your expertise. What do they want to know?Plotnick: I think there is a hunger out there from companies designing buttons or consumer technologies to try to understand the history of how we used to do things, how we might bring that to bear on the present, and what the future looks like with these interfaces. I’ve had a number of interesting discussions with companies, including one that manufactures push-button interfaces. I had a conversation with them about medical devices like CT machines and X-ray machines, trying to imagine the easiest way to push a button in that situation, to save people time and improve the patient encounter. I’ve also talked to people about what will make someone use a defibrillator or not. Even though it’s really simple to go up to these automatic machines, if you see someone going into cardiac arrest in a mall or out on the street, a lot of people are terrified to actually push the button that would get this machine started. We had a really fascinating discussion about why someone wouldn’t push a button, and what would it take to get them to feel okay about doing that. In all of these cases, these are design questions, but they’re also social and cultural questions. I like the idea that people who are in the humanities studying these things from a long-term perspective can also speak to engineers trying to build these devices.So these companies also want to know about the history of buttons? Plotnick: I’ve had some fascinating conversations around history. We all want to learn what mistakes not to make and what worked well in the past. There’s often this narrative of progress, that things are only getting better with technology over time. But if we look at these lessons, I think we can see that sometimes things were simpler or better in a past moment, and sometimes they were harder. Often with new technologies, we think we’re completely reinventing the wheel. But maybe these concepts existed a long time ago, and we haven’t paid attention to that. There’s a lot to be learned from the past. [Back to top] Full Article History of technology Tactile display Interfaces Control systems Touchscreens
ba Azerbaijan Plans Caspian-Black Sea Energy Corridor By spectrum.ieee.org Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2024 15:58:36 +0000 Azerbaijan next week will garner much of the attention of the climate tech world, and not just because it will host COP29, the United Nation’s giant annual climate change conference. The country is promoting a grand, multi-nation plan to generate renewable electricity in the Caucasus region and send it thousands of kilometers west, under the Black Sea, and into energy–hungry Europe.The transcontinental connection would start with wind, solar, and hydropower generated in Azerbaijan and Georgia, and off-shore wind power generated in the Caspian Sea. Long-distance lines would carry up to 1.5 gigawatts of clean electricity to Anaklia, Georgia, at the east end of the Black Sea. An undersea cable would move the electricity across the Black Sea and deliver it to Constanta, Romania, where it could be distributed further into Europe.The scheme’s proponents say this Caspian-Black Sea energy corridor will help decrease global carbon emissions, provide dependable power to Europe, modernize developing economies at Europe’s periphery, and stabilize a region shaken by war. Organizers hope to build the undersea cable within the next six years at an estimated cost of €3.5 billion (US $3.8 billion).To accomplish this, the governments of the involved countries must quickly circumvent a series of technical, financial, and political obstacles. “It’s a huge project,” says Zviad Gachechiladze, a director at Georgian State Electrosystem, the agency that operates the country’s electrical grid, and one of the architects of the Caucasus green-energy corridor. “To put it in operation [by 2030]—that’s quite ambitious, even optimistic,” he says.Black Sea Cable to Link Caucasus and EuropeThe technical lynchpin of the plan falls on the successful construction of a high voltage direct current (HVDC) submarine cable in the Black Sea. It’s a formidable task, considering that it would stretch across nearly 1,200 kilometers of water, most of which is over 2 km deep, and, since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, littered with floating mines. By contrast, the longest existing submarine power cable—the North Sea Link—carries 1.4 GW across 720 km between England and Norway, at depths of up to 700 meters.As ambitious as Azerbaijan’s plans sound, longer undersea connections have been proposed. The Australia-Asia PowerLink project aims to produce 6 GW at a vast solar farm in Northern Australia and send about a third of it to Singapore via a 4,300-km undersea cable. The Morocco-U.K. Power Project would send 3.6 GW over 3,800 km from Morocco to England. A similar attempt by Desertec to send electricity from North Africa to Europe ultimately failed.Building such cables involves laying and stitching together lengths of heavy submarine power cables from specialized ships—the expertise for which lies with just two companies in the world. In an assessment of the Black Sea project’s feasibility, the Milan-based consulting and engineering firm CESI determined that the undersea cable could indeed be built, and estimated that it could carry up to 1.5 GW—enough to supply over 2 million European households.But to fill that pipe, countries in the Caucasus region would have to generate much more green electricity. For Georgia, that will mostly come from hydropower, which already generates over 80 percent of the nation’s electricity. “We are a hydro country. We have a lot of untapped hydro potential,” says Gachechiladze.Azerbaijan and Georgia Plan Green Energy CorridorGenerating hydropower can also generate opposition, because of the way dams alter rivers and landscapes. “There were some cases when investors were not able to construct power plants because of opposition of locals or green parties” in Georgia, says Salome Janelidze, a board member at the Energy Training Center, a Georgian government agency that promotes and educates around the country’s energy sector.“It was definitely a problem and it has not been totally solved,” says Janelidze. But “to me it seems it is doable,” she says. “You can procure and construct if you work closely with the local population and see them as allies rather than adversaries.”For Azerbaijan, most of the electricity would be generated by wind and solar farms funded by foreign investment. Masdar, the renewable-energy developer of the United Arab Emirates government, has been investing heavily in wind power in the country. In June, the company broke ground on a trio of wind and solar projects with 1 GW capacity. It intends to develop up to 9 GW more in Azerbaijan by 2030. ACWA Power, a Saudi power-generation company, plans to complete a 240-MW solar plant in the Absheron and Khizi districts of Azerbaijan next year and has struck a deal with the Azerbaijani Ministry of Energy to install up to 2.5 GW of offshore and onshore wind.CESI is currently running a second study to gauge the practicality of the full breadth of the proposed energy corridor—from the Caspian Sea to Europe—with a transmission capacity of 4 to 6 GW. But that beefier interconnection will likely remain out of reach in the near term. “By 2030, we can’t claim our region will provide 4 GW or 6 GW,” says Gachechiladze. “1.3 is realistic.”COP29: Azerbaijan’s Renewable Energy PushSigns of political support have surfaced. In September, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Romania, and Hungary created a joint venture, based in Romania, to shepherd the project. Those four countries in 2022 inked a memorandum of understanding with the European Union to develop the energy corridor. The involved countries are in the process of applying for the cable to be selected as an EU “project of mutual interest,” making it an infrastructure priority for connecting the union with its neighbors. If selected, “the project could qualify for 50 percent grant financing,” says Gachechiladze. “It’s a huge budget. It will improve drastically the financial condition of the project.” The commissioner responsible for EU enlargement policy projected that the union would pay an estimated €2.3 billion ($2.5 billion) toward building the cable.Whether next week’s COP29, held in Baku, Azerbaijan, will help move the plan forward remains to be seen. In preparation for the conference, advocates of the energy corridor have been taking international journalists on tours of the country’s energy infrastructure.Looming over the project are the security issues threaten to thwart it. Shipping routes in the Black Sea have become less dependable and safe since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. To the south, tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan remain after the recent war and ethnic violence.In order to improve relations, many advocates of the energy corridor would like to include Armenia. “The cable project is in the interests of Georgia, it’s in the interests of Armenia, it’s in the interests of Azerbaijan,” says Agha Bayramov, an energy geopolitics researcher at the University of Groningen, in the Netherlands. “It might increase the chance of them living peacefully together. Maybe they’ll say, ‘We’re responsible for European energy. Let’s put our egos aside.’” Full Article Undersea cable Hvdc Supergrid Green energy
ba Comment on Case Study: Premature Baby Overcomes Life-Threatening Complications by Blue Techker By www.thehealthsite.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 14:49:56 +0000 <a href="https://bluetechker.com/" rel="nofollow ugc">Blue Techker</a> Nice post. I learn something totally new and challenging on websites Full Article
ba Charger recall spells more bad news for Humane’s maligned AI Pin By arstechnica.com Published On :: Fri, 01 Nov 2024 17:33:44 +0000 Humane first reported overheating problems with the portable charger in June. Full Article AI Tech recall wearables
ba Review: M4 and M4 Pro Mac minis are probably Apple’s best Mac minis ever By arstechnica.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 14:00:50 +0000 First Mac mini redesign in almost 15 years highlights how good the insides are. Full Article Apple Features Tech apple Apple silicon m4 m4 pro Mac mini
ba Photos of bus crash in India misrepresented as 'road accident in Bangladesh' By www.yahoo.com Published On :: 2024-11-13T06:15:58Z Full Article
ba Can a Mother’s Mental Health Impact a Baby in the Womb? By www.smithsonianmag.com Published On :: Wed, 09 Oct 2024 12:00:00 +0000 Growing research indicates a pregnant woman’s stress level and overall mental well-being can affect fetal and child development, yet access to prenatal mental health care remains inadequate Full Article
ba Can Lynx Be Saved in the Balkans? By www.smithsonianmag.com Published On :: Thu, 17 Oct 2024 12:00:00 +0000 A small team of local scientists are fighting rapid industrialization, misinformation and more to save Europe’s iconic cat Full Article
ba Here's How Weather Balloons Can Harm Marine Animals By www.smithsonianmag.com Published On :: Fri, 18 Oct 2024 12:00:00 +0000 Latex balloons designed to collect high-altitude data can become a threat after they burst Full Article
ba Even as A.I. Technology Races Ahead, the Prehistoric Science of Wildlife Tracking Is Making a Comeback By www.smithsonianmag.com Published On :: Wed, 23 Oct 2024 12:00:00 +0000 Humans perfected how to identify wild animals over millennia, and now biologists are rediscovering the exceptional worth of the tracks and marks left behind Full Article
ba Hurricane Helene Battered the 'Salamander Capital of the World' With Floods and Landslides. Will the Beloved Amphibians Survive the Aftermath? By www.smithsonianmag.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 13:00:00 +0000 The storm decimated a region rich with dozens of species already struggling with habitat loss and disease Full Article
ba Eleventh Circuit Judge Absolutely Embarrasses CNN on Misinformation and We Are Here for It By twitchy.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 17:15:00 -0500 Full Article <![CDATA[Brian Stelter]]> <![CDATA[CNN]]> <![CDATA[defamation]]> <![CDATA[disinformation]]> <![CDATA[Elon Musk]]> <![CDATA[James O'Keefe]]> <![CDATA[misinformation]]> <![CDATA[Project Veritas]]> <![CDATA[twitter]]>
ba Here's Your Periodic Reminder the UN Is EVIL and USELESS: They Invited the TALIBAN to Climate Conference By twitchy.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 19:00:04 -0500 Full Article <![CDATA[climate]]> <![CDATA[Climate change]]> <![CDATA[Taliban]]> <![CDATA[UN]]> <![CDATA[United Nations]]> <![CDATA[women's rights]]>
ba Amazon Sale: Up to 50% Off Rebecca Minkoff Handbags at the Big Summer Sale By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 11 Aug 2020 15:20:18 PDT Shop these deep discounts of up to 50% off of loads of styles of Rebecca Minkoff handbags at Amazon's Big Summer Sale. [[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]] Full Article Shopping
ba Barack Obama Reacts to Kamala Harris' Historic VP Nomination By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 11 Aug 2020 17:48:44 PDT The former president thinks Joe Biden 'nailed this decision.' [[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]] Full Article News
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ba Karl Soderlund, Sally Jessy Raphael’s Husband, Dead at 90 By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 11 Aug 2020 21:30:38 PDT Soderlund died from complications due to Alzheimer's disease. [[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]] Full Article News
ba Green energy transition is ‘unstoppable’, says Ed Miliband By www.channel4.com Published On :: We spoke to energy secretary Ed Miliband and began by asking him what he thought of Donald Trump saying climate change is a hoax. Full Article
ba Rosebank: Legal challenge over Scottish oil field begins By www.channel4.com Published On :: The fight between environmental campaigners and fossil fuel moved to the Scottish courts today. Full Article
ba Unveiling Diversity: Nudity Across Borders in Global Cinema By www.chartsattack.com Published On :: Fri, 18 Oct 2024 12:33:14 +0000 Welcome, film enthusiasts, to a captivating exploration of the diverse world of nudity in global cinema! In an era where cultural nuances shape the way we perceive art, it’s fascinating to dissect how different societies approach the depiction of the human form on the silver screen. Among different diversities like age diversity, political diversity, and […] The post Unveiling Diversity: Nudity Across Borders in Global Cinema appeared first on Chart Attack. Full Article Entertainment Cinema Cinematic Expression Films movies nudity
ba How to Read Non-Verbal Cues for Better Intimacy in the Bedroom By www.chartsattack.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 04:13:42 +0000 Intimacy is about more than just physical connection; it’s about understanding and responding to your partner’s needs, desires, and boundaries. Being in tune with their non-verbal cues is one of the most effective ways to foster a deeper emotional connection, enhancing the pleasure you both feel. This article delves into how you can read your […] The post How to Read Non-Verbal Cues for Better Intimacy in the Bedroom appeared first on Chart Attack. Full Article Love & Sex Relationships Bedroom Body Language Eye Contact Facial Expressions Intimacy Non-verbal communication
ba What makes baseball’s “magic mud” so special? By arstechnica.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 17:07:54 +0000 It has just the right mix of spreadability, stickiness, and friction to give pitchers a better grip on the ball. Full Article Science adhesion baseball geomaterials materials science Non-newtonian fluids Physics rheology science soft matter
ba Research monkeys still having a ball days after busting out of lab, police say By arstechnica.com Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 22:51:02 +0000 They pose no risk to human health, and they're living their best lives. Full Article Health Science escape monkeys research
ba Breitbart Business Digest: The Trump Economic Mandate By www.breitbart.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 02:00:14 +0000 Donald Trump and the Republicans have a mandate for new economic policy. The post Breitbart Business Digest: The Trump Economic Mandate appeared first on Breitbart. Full Article Economy Politics Breitbart Business Digest deficit Donald Trump inflation Tariffs tax cuts
ba U.S. Watchdog Report: China Holds More Meetings with Taliban than Any Other Country By www.breitbart.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 23:49:32 +0000 The office of the U.S. Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR), a federal watchdog agency, revealed in its regular report that China has held more than 200 meetings with Taliban terrorists since their return to power, Afghanistan's Tolo News reported this weekend. The post U.S. Watchdog Report: China Holds More Meetings with Taliban than Any Other Country appeared first on Breitbart. Full Article Asia Economy National Security Afghanistan China communism jihad radical Islam Taliban
ba U.N. Climate Summit Host Azerbaijan: Fossil Fuels a 'Gift from God,' Environmentalists Engaging in 'Blackmail' By www.breitbart.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 23:59:46 +0000 Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, whose country is hosting the COP29 climate summit this week, lashed out at Western media and climate activists on Tuesday for criticizing his country’s oil and gas industries. The post U.N. Climate Summit Host Azerbaijan: Fossil Fuels a ‘Gift from God,’ Environmentalists Engaging in ‘Blackmail’ appeared first on Breitbart. Full Article Environment National Security Azerbaijan Climate Change COP29 European Union green energy natural gas Oil