Meta Fined Record €1.2 Billion in EU Over US Data Transfers
Facebook owner Meta Platforms Inc. was hit by a record €1.2 billion ($1.3 billion) European Union privacy fine
2023-05-22 17:20
Montenegro media guide
An overview of the media in Montenegro, as well as links to broadcasters and newspapers.
2023-05-22 17:17
A Rare Shift in Crypto Volatility Offers Ether a Boost Relative to Bitcoin
Volatility gauges suggest traders expect smaller near-term swings in Ether compared with Bitcoin, a reversal of the usual
2023-05-22 14:59
China bans major chip maker Micron from key infrastructure projects
It is China's first major move against a US chip maker, as tensions increase between Beijing and Washington.
2023-05-22 10:50
Instagram Suffers Brief Outage Affecting Hundred of Thousands
Instagram, the popular photo-sharing app owned by Meta Platforms Inc., appeared to suffer an outage Sunday evening in
2023-05-22 08:58
Crippling Heat Deepens Asia’s Reliance on Russian Energy
The extreme heat that’s been scorching Asia in recent weeks has produced one clear beneficiary — Russia. As
2023-05-22 08:54
Toyota Wants to Make More Than Just EVs — and Has Plenty of Company
When Japan played host to Group of Seven leaders last week, the country’s top auto executives formed a
2023-05-22 07:49
University of Chicago Gets Quantum Tech Funding From IBM, Google
The University of Chicago will partner with International Business Machines Corp. and Alphabet Inc.’s Google in deals totaling
2023-05-22 03:24
Who Can Beat Google in the Search Game? It Won't Be Neeva
Having once set its sights on challenging Google’s search engine dominance, Neeva has admitted it
2023-05-22 03:20
Western Digital Will Release Fix For Faulty SanDisk SSDs
Western Digital will release a firmware update to fix an issue with its SanDisk Extreme
2023-05-22 03:19
Macron Says Mongolia to Supply Critical Metals for Green Push
Mongolia has agreed to supply critical metals to France that it needs as part of its shift to
2023-05-22 01:54
Proof that Vikings were in America far earlier than Columbus discovered
The discovery of North America is synonymous with Christopher Columbus, but proof has been found confirming that the Vikings were there hundreds of years earlier. Columbus is said to have “discovered the New World" in 1492 CE, but new analysis has suggested that the Norse people in Greenland were using wood from North America centuries before. Research focused on timber used in Norse sites across Greenland which people lived in between 1000 and 1400. The findings show that some of the wood came from types of trees that were grown outside of Greenland. One was the Jack pine, which is found in Canada. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Archaeologist Lísabet Guðmundsdóttir from the University of Iceland studied the timber and put across his findings in the journal Antiquity. “These findings highlight the fact that Norse Greenlanders had the means, knowledge, and appropriate vessels to cross the Davis Strait to the east coast of North America, at least up until the 14th century,” the study says. “As such, journeys were being made from Greenland to North America throughout the entirety of the period of Norse settlement in Greenland, and resources were being acquired by the Norse from North America for far longer than previously thought.” It’s not the first time that it’s been suggested that Norse communities travelled to north America. Italian texts from the 14th century contain references to Vikings making contact with Markland, which is believed to be on the Labrador coast in Canada. The 13th-century Norwegian text called Konungsskuggsjá also referenced the fact that Greenland at the time wasn’t home to great abundances of natural resources, reading: “Everything that is needed to improve the land must be purchased abroad, both iron and all the timber used in building houses.” Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-05-22 00:17