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List of All Articles with Tag 't'

Anti-affirmative action group, emboldened by US Supreme Court, targets scholarships
Anti-affirmative action group, emboldened by US Supreme Court, targets scholarships
By Joseph Ax A non-profit group opposing race-based education policies has filed more than a dozen U.S. civil
2023-09-22 18:23
EU set to demand e-fuel cars have no climate impact -document
EU set to demand e-fuel cars have no climate impact -document
By Kate Abnett BRUSSELS (Reuters) -The European Union is set to demand that cars running on e-fuels must be 100%
2023-09-22 17:53
Scientists baffled by discovery of completely mummified man just 16 days after he was last seen alive
Scientists baffled by discovery of completely mummified man just 16 days after he was last seen alive
Warning: This article does contain images some readers might find disturbing. Investigators have been left puzzled after finding a man’s body in a stage of “complete mummification” just 16 days after he was last seen alive. The man was found alongside a railway line in Bulgaria on 3 September. Identity checks later found he was 34 when he died, with a history of alcoholism, and was last seen alive on 16 August. However, his insides had been reduced to “structureless masses”, and case workers have been unable to explain how the body reached such an advanced state of mummification so quickly. A report published in Cureus journal shows a full set of pictures of the corpse – linked at the foot of this article. Trigger warning, they’re pretty gruesome. It has got scientists fascinated though. The report’s authors reveal that the “skin surface showed coloration ranging from light to dark brown, and it was hard and leathery.” “The internal examination of the body showed that the internal organs in the cranial, thoracic, and abdominal cavities had decayed into dried, brownish-black masses,” they write. Researchers stressed that natural mummification “usually takes several weeks to 6-12 months”, and that such a fast transformation would only normally happen in extreme heat. The temperature in Sofia has ranged from 16 to 33 degrees Celsius in the time period, which scientists said is not hot enough. The authors speculated that passing trains could have created a windy environment that could have contributed to drying out the body and causing bodily fluids to evaporate. They said it almost certainly wasn’t the weather in Sofia that caused the bizarrely fast mummification process. As of yet, it remains a mystery. Here’s the journal article. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter 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.
2023-09-22 17:17
Schroders New Bond Scores Tilt Scales Toward Emerging Markets
Schroders New Bond Scores Tilt Scales Toward Emerging Markets
Schroders Plc said it has a way to score sovereign debt that corrects for the rich-world biases inherent
2023-09-22 16:58
Another top Silicon Valley investor is splitting off its China business as pressure mounts
Another top Silicon Valley investor is splitting off its China business as pressure mounts
GGV Capital, a prominent Silicon Valley venture capital firm, has become the latest big investor to break up its US and China operations into separate companies as tensions between the two countries over tech and geopolitics continue to rise.
2023-09-22 16:54
Alibaba’s Cainiao Plans to Raise At Least $1 Billion in Hong Kong IPO Soon
Alibaba’s Cainiao Plans to Raise At Least $1 Billion in Hong Kong IPO Soon
Cainiao Network Technology Co., the logistics arm of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., is planning to file for its
2023-09-22 16:27
Microsoft’s Activision Deal Set to Get UK’s Blessing: The London Rush
Microsoft’s Activision Deal Set to Get UK’s Blessing: The London Rush
Game on! Microsoft Corp.’s stop-and-go deal to acquire Activision Blizzard Inc. got an early-morning boost from the UK’s
2023-09-22 15:50
Huawei’s New Chip Powering Sales Surge Shown to Have 5G Support
Huawei’s New Chip Powering Sales Surge Shown to Have 5G Support
Huawei Technologies Co.’s Kirin 9000s processor supports 5G wireless speeds, TechInsights said, dispelling some of the mystery around
2023-09-22 14:21
Britain says may clear restructured Microsoft-Activision deal
Britain says may clear restructured Microsoft-Activision deal
Microsoft's restructured acquisition of Activision Blizzard "opens the door" to the deal being cleared, Britain's antitrust regulator said on Friday.
2023-09-22 14:15
Srettha Meets Tech Giants as Thailand Eyes More US Investment
Srettha Meets Tech Giants as Thailand Eyes More US Investment
Thailand’s Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin met with executives from Microsoft Corp., Alphabet Inc. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
2023-09-22 13:51
X is shutting down feature to send posts to select people after privacy concern
X is shutting down feature to send posts to select people after privacy concern
X is shutting down Circles months after some users flagged glitches with the privacy-focused tool that lets users send posts to a select audience. The Elon Musk-owned company that was earlier called Twitter said on Thursday that Circles will be disabled by 31 October. “After this date, you will not be able to create new posts that are limited to your Circle, nor will you be able to add people to your Circle,” X wrote in a post. “You will, however, be able to remove people from your Circle, by unfollowing them,” the company said. Once unfollowed, users previously part of one’s Circle “can no longer see your past Circle Posts,” it said. The feature – similar to Instagram’s Close Friends stories – was officially launched in August 2022 when the platform was called Twitter, and before the Tesla billionaire took over the company. “Twitter Circle is a way to send Tweets to select people, and share your thoughts with a smaller crowd,” the company had said after the feature’s launch. “You choose who’s in your Twitter Circle, and only the individuals you’ve added can reply to and interact with the Tweets you share in the circle,” it had then said. Then in April, a software glitch exposed the private posts of some users to other followers and strangers not part of their Circle, sparking widespread privacy concern. Users began noticing their private Circle posts began appearing on the algorithmically generated “For You” timeline, meaning these posts were being noticed by people outside the intended audience. In some cases, users noticed their Circle posts were even reaching people who don’t even follow them. In emails sent to affected users, X said a “security incident” was behind the public display of their Circle tweets, adding that the issue was “immediately fixed” so these posts were no longer visible outside of the user’s Circle. “We’ve conducted a thorough investigation to understand how this occurred and have addressed this issue,” the company said. “We understand the risks that an incident like this can introduce and we deeply regret this happened,” it said at the time. The software bug added to the number of issues that plagued Twitter following Mr Musk’s takeover of the company and the multibillionaire laying off nearly two-thirds of its workforce. The glitch was likely due to the platform’s recommendation algorithm likely failing to filter out Circle posts before sharing them with others on the site, former Twitter engineer Theo Browne told TechCrunch at the time. Now, in a new update, X said in a post that it is “deprecating Circles as of Oct 31st, 2023”, without delving into why the company is shutting down the feature. Read More Two dead and dozens injured after bus carrying high school band crashes on I-84 in New York Tourist calls police after being charged £500 for chilli crab in Singapore Scientists discover world’s oldest human-built structure, built by an extinct species ChatGPT can now generate images and create illustrated books Man drives off bridge ‘following Google Maps’ Solar panel breakthrough could supercharge ‘miracle material’ production
2023-09-22 12:59
Despite China’s iPhone Ban, Buyers and Scalpers Are Flocking to Apple Stores
Despite China’s iPhone Ban, Buyers and Scalpers Are Flocking to Apple Stores
Chinese customers flocked to Apple stores to buy the latest iPhone 15 despite government restrictions and local competition,
2023-09-22 12:58
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