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| Don't like ads? Go ad-free with TradeBriefs Premium CEO Picks - The best that international journalism has to offer! S37 S43Tesla to lay off more than 10 percent of its workers as sales slow   Times are starting to get tough for Tesla. The electric vehicle automaker had been riding high, with quarter after quarter of successive growth and plenty of profits in the process. But lately, that success has mostly been due to a series of price cuts meant to tempt customers to buy into an aging lineup. This March, the company reported its first quarterly decline since 2020.
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S175 Ways Executives Can Manage Conflict with the Board   High stakes, strong wills, and increasing uncertainty can make decisions at the top of your organization fraught. The backing of a board can mobilize an organization, but a significant divergence of vision and values may lead the board to stall progress on an organization’s highest priorities — and even unseat a CEO. Executives must proactively and productively make covert disagreements overt and foster a healthy dialog with board members. First, they must be the thermostat in the room, raising tough topics and pushing productive conversations. Second, they must inform the room of a full situation and its status early and often. Third, they must identify and break down early signals of conflict among members. Fourth, they must keep the long view in mind, even in a short-term crisis. Finally, they must avoid polarities in decision-making, encouraging all members to consider the upsides and downsides of all options.
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S29Airchat Is Silicon Valley's Latest Obsession  At some point this weekend, Airchat cofounder Naval Ravikant had to close off new sign-ups to his app. After releasing a new version Friday, Airchat was quickly overloaded with people thirsting for a glimpseâÂÂor an audio snippetâÂÂof Silicon ValleyâÂÂs newest fad. Ravikant had given a small number of users unlimited invites to share with friends, and it backfired.âÂÂWeâÂÂve had an influx of new users, so weâÂÂre turning off the invitation capability for a little while,â Ravikant said on Sunday.
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S35Colon Cancer Linked to Mouth Bacteria   Genomic research of Fusobacterium nucleatum isolated from colon cancer tumors may help researchers develop future screening tests and cancer vaccinesA healthy colon is a marvelously effective organ that squeezes nutrients and water out of food while pumping out waste. But sometimes small clumps of abnormal cells grow on the colon’s lining and turn into cancer. Colon cancer is relatively common but tricky to catch; it can only be confirmed with a colonoscopy or surgery. And a recent, so-far-unexplained rise in colon cancer rates among younger people has ramped up urgency in learning more about how the disease works—and how to prevent it.
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S368 Ways to Protect Wildlife Near Your Home   This Anna's Hummingbird is approaching a flower at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco, California.Conservation may seem like something that scientists do to protect species that many people only ever see in zoos. But conservation can happen everywhere—such as in your backyard, where you play ball, drink coffee and host barbecues. Even apartment dwellers can make a difference.
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S20The US Government Has a Microsoft Problem  When Microsoft revealed in January that foreign government hackers had once again breached its systems, the news prompted another round of recriminations about the security posture of the world's largest tech company.Despite the angst among policymakers, security experts, and competitors, Microsoft faced no consequences for its latest embarrassing failure. The United States government kept buying and using Microsoft products, and senior officials refused to publicly rebuke the tech giant. It was another reminder of how insulated Microsoft has become from virtually any government accountability, even as the Biden administration vows to make powerful tech firms take more responsibility for America's cyberdefense.
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S6Small Businesse Outcry Halts Momofuku's Bid to Defend its 'Chile Crunch' Trademark   Momofuku, a food and restaurant brand started by food mogul David Chang, said it won't defend its trademark on the name "chile crunch" after it sparked an outcry by sending cease-and-desist letters to other businesses using the term.Momofuku started selling its Chili Crunch product in 2020, a crunchy spicy oil with dried peppers and other ingredients like sesame seeds and garlic. It's a riff on Chinese condiment chili crisp and other similar products from other countries. Different variations of chili crisp and other hot sauces have gained popularity in the U.S. in recent years.
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S19The startup offering free toilets and coffee for delivery workers -- in exchange for their data   Every day, Fredy Ivan Alba Trejo bikes for over an hour through busy highways to reach pedestrian-friendly neighborhoods of Mexico City where he works as a food delivery worker for Rappi.His biggest challenge during the day is finding a reliable spot to use the restroom or charge his phone in an area that is far away from his home. Most restaurants don’t allow gig workers like him to use their facilities and shopping centers insist they leave their backpacks and helmets outside. “But by doing so we risk getting everything stolen,” the 29-year-old told Rest of World.
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S7Business Management, Employee Objectives Overlap in Great Stagnation Dilemma   Small business owners still smarting from post-pandemic high employee turnover rates that were labeled the Great Resignation have another labor problem to deal with. The so-called Great Stagnation of talent among their existing workers, even as managers struggle to find qualified outside recuits. That is the major conclusion from the recently released University of Phoenix Career Institute's annual study of 5,000 employees and 501 companies. Perhaps not surprisingly, both groups express diverging, even opposite views on their outlooks and ambitions for business.
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S2513 Best Gaming Mice and Mousepads (2024): Wireless, Wired, and Under $50  If you buy something using links in our stories, we may earn a commission. This helps support our journalism. Learn more. Please also consider subscribing to WIREDPicking a gaming mouse is a very personal endeavor. Everyone's hands are different, everyone's preferences and needs are different, and we all play different games. That's why we're lucky to live in the golden age of gaming mice, with major manufacturers pouring engineering muscle into one-upping one another. The result is a market loaded with high-quality yet relatively inexpensive mice.
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S2611 Best Strollers for Almost Every Budget and Need (2024)  If you buy something using links in our stories, we may earn a commission. This helps support our journalism. Learn more. Please also consider subscribing to WIREDWhen I started shopping for a stroller, I purchased the cheapest one that worked with my car seat and called it a day. To no one's surprise, that stroller was terrible. Both my child and I hated using it.
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S31Do Sperm Whales Have Culture?   As hard as it is to study these denizens of the deep, researchers have found some intriguing evidence to support the idea the "sperm whale culture" exists.Joseph Polidoro: Hal Whitehead can tell you exactly where he was when he discovered that sperm whales don’t all speak the same dialect.
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S39How Social Insurance Drives Credit Card Debt   New Wharton research finds that as more and more households become eligible for Medicaid, they have better access to credit.It always helps to have a little extra wiggle room with money, even if it means easier access to credit cards. That wiggle room can spring up if the government picks up a chunk of your health care tab, bringing about a string of helpful spillovers. New Wharton research shows how those positive outcomes play out with Medicaid, a social insurance program that provides health care for Americans with limited income and resources.
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S42 S47The Pixel 9 reportedly gears up for satellite SOS support   Google has been doing a lot of work in Android to support satellite-based messaging, and it sure would be nice if someone actually shipped some hardware it could use. Despite the feature launching with the iPhone 14 in 2022, Android manufacturers haven't been super receptive to copying the idea of satellite messaging. Qualcomm and satellite company Iridium built a working solution and incorporated it into Qualcomm's Snapdragon chips, only for zero Android manufacturers to support the feature, leading to the dissolution of the partnership. If Google wants an Android satellite SMS phone to play with, it seems like it will need to build the device itself.
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S5How the "Dune" screenwriters adapted an "unadaptable" book   Denis Villeneuve wasn’t the first person to adapt Frank Herbert’s 1965 science fiction novel Dune for the big screen, but he is the first to have done so successfully.In the 1970s, the Chilean-French filmmaker Alejandro Jodorowsky came close. He handed art design to renowned comic book artist Mobius, who produced hundreds of pieces of concept art, bringing the desert planet of Arrakis to life. He managed to cast the legendary Orson Welles in the role of the antagonist, the obese Baron Vladimir Harkonnen, by promising to hire the retired actor’s favorite Parisian chef as his personal cook. Musician Mick Jagger was brought on to play secondary antagonist Feyd-Rautha, the Baron’s psychotic nephew, while Shaddam IV, the Emperor of the Known Universe, would have been played by none other than surrealist painter Salvador Dalí. Jodorowsky’s vision seemed too good to be true. It was. Unwilling to compromise on the film’s whopping 14-hour runtime, Jodorowsky’s Dune languished in development hell, where it remains to this day.
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S4What geniuses get wrong about being "smart"   Join Barbara Oakley as she delves into the concept of “Einstellung,” a psychological phenomenon where our brains become stuck in one way of thinking. Oakley explains how this tendency to stick with what we know from an early age narrows our cognitive abilities, as unused brain connections are pruned away, limiting our potential to perceive and embrace new ideas.Using her own personal anecdotes, Oakley illustrates the dangers of these echo chambers and the importance of maintaining open dialogues with differing viewpoints. She warns of the societal risks of polarization and the dismissal of opposing opinions, drawing parallels between historical and contemporary issues with fake news and the importance of critical thinking.
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S9You Can Now Buy The Wing's $4,500 Meat Slicer (and Its Feminist Library)   Nearly two years after the buzzy women's co-working space permanently closed its doors, the Wing's landlord in New York City's Soho neighborhood is trying to unload a few items. Items from another location were previously put up for sale in 2023. There are no velvet banquettes or tiny terrazzo tables this time, however; this is largely a back-of-the house lot with just 14 listings posted directly to Facebook Marketplace by landlord Howard Baden, also the owner of the event space Soho Lofts NYC.Some office furnishings seem to have been left behind, too. Eight stand-up desks ($750 each), pentagonal side tables (seven for $600), at least two private phone booths by Room ($4500), an $8,500 chandelier, and perhaps the creme of the crop: the remainder of The Wing's feminist book collection, 23 shelves worth, all boxed up and ready to go for $2,000. (The number of books is unknown.)
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S12Apple Denies Violating Court Order in Epic Games Lawsuit   Apple made the arguments in a filing to U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers in Oakland, who presided over Epic's lawsuit in 2020 accusing Apple of violating antitrust law with its tight controls over how consumers download apps and pay for transactions within them.Epic said in a court filing last month that Cupertino, California-based Apple was in "blatant violation" of the court's injunction. It pointed to Apple's imposition of a 27% fee on developers for some purchases, which the video game maker said makes links for alternative payment options "commercially unusable."Â
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S15Businesses Must Soon Give Workers Time Off for Abortions   The Pregnant Workers Fairness Act (PWFA), signed into law in December 2022, bars workers from being discriminated against for pregnancy. The law directs most businesses with at least 15 workers to offer reasonable accommodations for employees who face difficulties doing their job because of "pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions." "[T]he type of accommodation that most likely will be sought under the PWFA regarding an abortion is time off to attend a medical appointment or for recovery," the final rule reads. "The PWFA, like the [Americans with Disabilities Act], does not require that leave as an accommodation be paid leave, so leave will be unpaid unless the employer's policies provide otherwise."
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S16What Space Exploration and Health Care Can Teach You About Navigating Uncertainty   In order to successfully navigate the uncertainty that characterizes today’s fast-paced and unpredictable world, leaders need to proactively prepare their teams for unexpected and time-sensitive emergencies. Space exploration and health care have cornered the market in this level of preparation. From the takeoff and landing of a space shuttle to managing uncontrollable bleeding in the operating room, there are vital lessons to be learned from these industries and adapted into others. Start by proactively envisioning worst-case scenarios through brainstorming sessions, scenario planning, and risk assessments. Then, prepare for such emergencies through training and practice. Finally, create a psychologically safe environment so all members of the team feel safe to communicate.
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S27Fake Footage of Iran's Attack on Israel Is Going Viral  In the hours after Iran announced its drone and missile attack on Israel on April 13, fake and misleading posts went viral almost immediately on X. The Institute for Strategic Dialogue (ISD), a nonprofit think tank, found a number of posts that claimed to reveal the strikes and their impact, but that instead used AI-generated videos, photos, and repurposed footage from other conflicts which showed rockets launching into the night, explosions, and even President Joe Biden in military fatigues.Just 34 of these misleading posts received more than 37 million views, according to ISD. Many of the accounts posting the misinformation were also verified, meaning they have paid X $8 per month for the âÂÂblue tickâ and that their content is amplified by the platformâÂÂs algorithm. ISD also found that several of the accounts claimed to be open source intelligence (OSINT) experts, which has, in recent years, become another way of lending legitimacy to their posts.
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S2 S11Samsung Sales Surge Pushes Apple Off the Global Smartphone Throne   Apple's smartphone shipments dropped about 10 percent in the first quarter of 2024, hurt by intensifying competition by Android smartphone makers aiming for the top spot, data from research firm IDC showed on Sunday.The iPhone-maker's steep sales decline comes after its strong performance in the December quarter when it overtook Samsung as the world's No.1 phone maker. It's back to the second spot, with 17.3 percent market share, as Chinese brands such as Huawei gain market share.Â
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S13Masters Gnomes Frenzy Tees Up Sports Collectible Craze   The Masters golf-centric gnomes have been selling out within a couple of hours each morning after the tournament gift shop opens. Patrons are more than willing to wait in hourlong lines for the $49.50 ceramic figurine that has become a highly coveted collector's item.One seller has listed the collection of eight Masters gnomes for $16,000 on eBay.Others who visited the shop this week have already put this year's gnome up for sale on eBay at nearly 10 times what they paid.
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S18 S23The Best Google Docs Keyboard Shortcuts for Boosting Your Productivity  Knowing your way around some keyboard shortcutsâwhether for Windows, macOS, or individual programsâis perhaps one of the best time-saving productivity hacks there is. You don't have to reach for the mouse or trackpad to navigate to a new place on the screen, and you don't have to hunt through menus to find options for formatting images and text: Just press the right key combination and you're done.There aren't many places where keyboard shortcuts are as useful as they are in Google Docs. When you're head-down in a document, these quick key presses can save you a serious amount of time, added up over the course of a dayâand it means your brain stays in its creative groove.
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S305 Characteristics of Stress-Resilient People (and How to Develop Them)   It’s not unusual for our stress levels to spike during career transitions like moving from school into the workforce, taking on a new role, or switching fields. Even when we know high stress is a part of the job and understand it will be temporary, our stress can become debilitating if we lack the tools to manage it. Here are the top five characteristics and behaviors stress-resilient leaders practice, along with tips for how to develop each one.
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S33AI Recruiters Have Joined the Job Search. Who Are They Helping?   Small start-ups and big professional platforms are using AI to find and recruit new hires—but these tools can reinforce biasSeattle-based user experience consultant Torrey Podmajersky received a cold e-mail in January from a recruiter called Jennie Johnson. The message said Johnson had created a career profile for Podmajersky and suggested a few matching openings, but the profile was too broad and left out several important pieces of her professional history. Podmajersky, who hadn’t been job hunting in the first place, figured it was a scam.
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S38 S40Why Staying in Your 401(k) After Retirement Makes Sense   Many retirees will do better if they keep their savings in their employers’ retirement plans instead of rolling over to IRAs, according to new research co-authored by Wharton’s Olivia S. Mitchell.Many Americans heading into retirement confront a weighty question that doesn’t have an easy answer: Should they retain their savings in their 401(k) plans, move them to an Individual Retirement Account (IRA), or cash out and pay taxes (and perhaps penalties) on the assets withdrawn?
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S41 S44Apple removes the first iOS Game Boy emulator released under new App Store rules   GBA4iOS is an open source program released under the GNU GPLv2 license, with licensing terms that let anyone "use, modify, and distribute my original code for this project without fear of legal consequences." But those expansive licensing terms only apply "unless you plan to submit your app to Apple’s App Store, in which case written permission from me is explicitly required."
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S46Judge halts Texas probe into Media Matters' reporting on X   A judge has preliminarily blocked what Media Matters for America (MMFA) described as Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton's attempt to "rifle through" confidential documents to prove that MMFA fraudulently manipulated X (formerly Twitter) data to ruin X's advertising business, as Elon Musk has alleged.
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S48 S50Review: Pitch-perfect Renegade Nell is a gem of a series you won't want to miss   Award-winning British TV writer Sally Wainwright is best known for the dramatic series Happy Valley (2014–2023) and Gentleman Jack (2019–2022), the latter produced jointly by BBC and HBO. Wainwright partnered with Disney+ for her latest series, the resolutely PG-13 Renegade Nell, which is a different beast altogether: a good old-fashioned, swashbuckling comic adventure with a supernatural twist, featuring a sassy cross-dressing heroine forced to turn to highway robbery to survive.
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S8World Bank and IMF Warning: U.S. Growth Brings Global Boost, but Watch Inflation   U.S. economic growth that keeps motoring above its potential is emerging as a key prop for an ongoing global expansion, but spillovers from persistently high inflation and tight monetary policy in the world's largest economy could pose new risks to a hoped-for "soft landing" around the world.As global financial leaders gather in Washington this week for the spring meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank, the outlook for the world's short-term economic fortunes may center on whether the surprising U.S. success is being driven more by constructive forces like increased labor supply and productivity or by outsized fiscal deficits that continue stoking demand and, potentially, inflation.
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S14As the AI Wave Crashes on the Tech World, the Number of Chief AI Officers in Companies Soars   Artificial intelligence is the hottest of new technologies, generating countless headlines form tech evangelists and technophobes in near equal measure. While AI is slowly changing everyday life, it's also changing the workplace, to the point where upper corporate management is making room for experts in this new and transformative force in business. New data from employment site LinkedIn show the number of companies worldwide that now have a dedicated executive leading AI efforts has tripled over the last five years.The Financial Times, reporting on LinkedIn's data, tries to explain the "Chief AI Officer" role in straightforward language. It's all about overseeing "the deployment of AI and generative AI within an organization" with a goal of "improving workforce efficiency, identifying new revenue streams," all while maintaining a weather eye on the bigger picture, and "mitigating ethical and security risks." The newspaper quotes David Mathison, an entrepreneur who's founder and CEO of the world's first Chief AI Officer Summit, saying the job needs a person with a "deep understanding of AI tech, machine learning, data science and analytics." It is, after all, a highly technical role that involves some truly cutting-edge tech--along with a grasp of the legal and change-management issues the technology brings with it.Â
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S3No, the expanding Universe doesn't break the speed of light   In one of the most monumental discoveries of the 20th century, we learned that the Universe is not simply a static, unchanging background, but rather that space itself expands as time marches on. It’s as though the very fabric of the Universe itself is stretching so that distant objects get farther and farther apart. We see this phenomenon in all directions and in all locations in space when we look beyond the Local Group. And yet, nearly 100 years after it was all worked out, it’s still a puzzling, counterintuitive phenomenon, even for experts in astronomy and astrophysics.It’s only natural to wonder, if the Universe is expanding, how fast is the expansion of space? That’s what Darren Bobley wants to know, asking:
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S22The Paradox That's Supercharging Climate Change  No good deed goes unpunishedâand that includes trying to slow climate change. By cutting greenhouse gas emissions, humanity will spew out fewer planet-cooling aerosolsâsmall particles of pollution that act like tiny umbrellas to bounce some of the sun's energy back into space."Even more important than this direct reflection effect, they alter the properties of clouds," says Ãivind Hodnebrog, a climate researcher at the Center for International Climate Research in Oslo, Norway. "In essence, they make the clouds brighter, and the clouds reflect sunlight back into space."
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S34If Alien Life Is Found, How Should Scientists Break the News?   At a recent workshop, researchers and journalists debated how to announce a potential discovery of extraterrestrial lifeIf one day scientists discover evidence of extraterrestrial life, how will they tell the world? How certain will they be of their discovery, and how will the public know what sense to make of it? Will the news cause fear, existential agony, dancing in the streets or merely a worldwide shrug? And how much will that reaction depend on the news’s delivery?
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| S1 S10Huawei Has a New Laptop Powered by an Intel Chip. Lawmakers Aren't Happy About It   The United States placed Huawei on a trade restriction list in 2019 for violating Iran sanctions, part of a broader effort to hobble Beijing's technological advances. Placement on the list means the company's suppliers have to seek a special, difficult-to-obtain license before shipping to it. One such license, issued by the Trump administration, has allowed Intel to ship central processors to Huawei for use in laptops since 2020. China hardliners had urged the Biden administration to revoke that license, but many grudgingly accepted that it would expire later this year and not be renewed.
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S28Donald Trump Poses a Unique Threat to Truth Social, Says Truth Social  Trump Media & Technology Group, the Truth Social parent company majority-owned by former president Donald Trump, filed a document with the Securities and Exchange Commission this morning that helpfully details all of the ways Trump himself poses a threat to the company and its shareholders. While the company generated just over $4 million in revenue in 2023, Trump Media's valuation has fluctuated wildly since going public in March, at one point reaching more than $7 billion. As of this morning, the company was valued at $3.7 billion. Trump Media has become a meme stock, where the stock price is governed more by vibes than traditional financial performance.The SEC document filed by Trump Media this morning, which announced the public stock offering of 21.5 million shares, also detailed the company's "risk factors." These statements are standard for publicly traded companies, and usually include anything from macroeconomic headwinds to worst-case scenarios like earthquakes or terrorist attacks. The filing does include several risk factors that aren't directly related to Trump, including competition from other social media companies, deficiencies in bookkeeping and accounting, and data privacy laws. And the company has faced multiple lawsuits from early employees of the company, who argue they deserve more shares.
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S45 S49 S21Ikea's New Range Is Stealth Mode for Gamers  When you think âÂÂgaming furnitureâ a very specific aesthetic probably comes to mind. Sharp edges, RGB lighting, and for some reason seats that look like they belong in a race car. ItâÂÂs an aesthetic that doesnâÂÂt play well with most other living spaces.ThatâÂÂs something Ikea wants to change with its new line of furniture for gamers. But that raises the question: Where, exactly, does gaming fit in the modern home?
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S24Asus ROG Strix Scar 18 (2024) Review: Portable Powerhouse Gaming  If you buy something using links in our stories, we may earn a commission. This helps support our journalism. Learn more. Please also consider subscribing to WIREDGaming laptops usually face a trade-off between power and price. With this year's ROG Strix Scar 18, Asus went all in on the former, delivering a laptop that's more powerful than many gaming desktops. Just be prepared to shell out for that privilege.
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S32Where Is Planet Nine? Its Hiding Places Are Running Out   The search for a mysterious planetary body beyond Neptune has narrowed down its possible location—if it exists at allThis mystery has puzzled scientists for decades, but the answer—and the suspected world—remains elusive. Astronomers leading the search for the potential planet orbiting our sun far beyond Neptune recently revealed that they’ve whittled away at where it might be in the sky, eliminating 78 percent of its possible hiding places. While that lengthens the odds that the planet exists, there’s a still a lot of sky left to search, including spots that are much tougher to sift through.
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S69Trump's Willing Accomplice   Yesterday, ABC News's George Stephanopoulos conducted a skillful and revealing interview with New Hampshire Governor Chris Sununu. Over nine damning minutes, Sununu illustrated how deep into the Republican Party the rot has gone.The context for the interview is important. Governor Sununu is hardly a MAGA enthusiast. During the 2024 GOP primary, he supported Nikki Haley, and over the past several years, he's been a harsh critic of Donald Trump. Sununu has referred to him as a "loser," an "asshole," and "not a real Republican." He has said the nation needs to move past the "nonsense and drama" from the former president and that he expects "some kind of guilty verdict" against Trump. "This is serious," Sununu said last June. "If even half of this stuff is true, he's in real trouble."
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S70Is This the End for 'Bluey'?   The third-season episode 'The Sign' seems to point to an ending of sorts for the hugely popular Disney show.A few weeks ago, I found myself, fairly late at night, Googling Is Bandit Heeler depressed? This is, I admit, a ridiculous thing to wonder about a cartoon dog, but what can I say? The vibes had just been off for the patriarch of Bluey, Disney+'s wildly popular show about a family of Australian Blue Heelers. In "Stickbird," something is clearly bothering Bandit, to the point where he's grouchy and detached on a family vacation. And in "TV Shop," a transcendent piece of small-scale storytelling set in a drugstore, Bandit goes to buy vitamins because he's been feeling down, and while he's shopping, his kidsâBluey and Bingoâmanage to choreograph a multipart video performance with more dynamism and emotional heft than anything by Ivo van Hove. (At home, this is the part where my kids and I unfailingly break into frenzied, humiliating Dance Mode.) But Bandit, although he appreciates what his children have done, can muster only a small smile and a foot tap while watching. It felt a little unsettling.
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