More than most genres, survival horror feels rooted in time. It started with the methodical Resident Evil on the original PlayStation and is defined in part by limitation — a slow pace, grimy visuals, and scant resources to help amplify the scares. Many of those elements stemmed from the early, awkward days of 3D gaming, whether it was Resident Evil’s clunky controls, which made zombie chases more terrifying, or Silent Hill’s fog, which lent an iconic atmosphere while also letting the developers get around technical limitations of the time.
Technology
UnitedHealth admits hack exposed data of 100 million Americans
UnitedHealth has admitted that the health data of more than 100 million Americans was exposed in a hack. This is the first time the multinational health insurance and services company, has attributed a specific number to the cyberattack that took place earlier this year.
UnitedHealth admits health data of 100 million US citizens was compromised
UnitedHealth Group (UHG) acquired Change Healthcare in 2022. The two companies are now part of the same healthcare organization under the UnitedHealth brand.
In February this year, Change Healthcare suffered a massive data breach. However, the company did not mention the number of individuals whose data was exposed.
In May, UnitedHealth CEO Andrew Witty indicated that “maybe a third” of all American’s health data was exposed in the attack. A month later, Change Healthcare published a data breach notification, wherein the company merely stated that the ransomware attack exposed a “substantial quantity of data” for a “substantial proportion of people in America.”
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office for Civil Rights (OCR) has updated the “Data Breach” portal. The column for Change Healthcare hack reportedly mentions that 100 million individuals are affected.
Largest American healthcare data breach in recent years
The FAQ section on the OCR website now mentions “On October 22, 2024, Change Healthcare notified OCR that approximately 100 million individual notices have been sent regarding this breach.”
Needless to say, with 100 million American citizens impacted, the ransomware attack could be one of the largest in recent years. What’s even more concerning apart from the number of civilians, is how the data breach was handled.
According to Bleeping Computer, threat actors stole 6TB of data from Change Healthcare. The attackers then encrypted computers on the network. As a remedial measure, the UnitedHealth subsidiary shut down its IT systems. This led to widespread outages in the U.S. healthcare system.
The BlackCat ransomware group, which conducted the attack, may have received about $22 million from UnitedHealth Group. The company allegedly paid to receive a decryption key and ensure the ransomware group deleted the stolen data.
The affiliate that worked with the ransomware group didn’t delete the data immediately. However, the entry for Change Healthcare has mysteriously disappeared from the affiliate’s website. This suggests UnitedHealth may have paid a second ransom demand.
It is not clear how UnitedHealth will be penalized. T-Mobile recently paid a paltry fine of $31.5 million for multiple data breaches. The carrier will get half the money to invest in tech to improve cybersecurity.
Technology
2 days until Disrupt 2024 begins and ticket prices increase
We are a mere 2 days away from one of the most anticipated tech events of the year!
San Francisco is about to be electrified by the global tech community. Join the crowd at Moscone West from October 28-30 (and all week) as Silicon Valley’s finest come together for TechCrunch Disrupt 2024.
Only two days left to save! Register now to get $400 off your ticket or grab two Expo+ tickets for half the price of one with our Expo+ 2-for-1 Pass. Prices go up when the doors to Disrupt open on October 28.
Lock in your discounted pass now.
Join the ultimate tech gathering
Connect with 10,000+ innovators and VC leaders
Join 10,000 tech visionaries, startup founders, and VC leaders for unparalleled opportunities to connect, collaborate, and forge lasting partnerships.
Discover 350+ showcasing startups
Enter the Expo Hall to experience the future of tech as over 350 startups showcase their groundbreaking innovations from across the globe. You can also look forward to these startups presenting their ideas in dynamic, quick-fire pitches to TechCrunch editors and attendees on the Pitch Showcase Stage in the Expo Hall.
Gain insights from 250+ industry giants
Uncover exclusive insights from leading industry experts across six specialized stages, focusing on key sectors of the tech landscape: AI, startups, venture capital, fintech, SaaS, and space.
- A.C. Charania, Agency Chief Technologist, NASA
- Alex Pall and Drew Taggart from The Chainsmokers, Co-Founders and Partners, MANTIS Venture Capital
- Ashton Kutcher, Co-founder, Sound Ventures
- Bridgit Mendler, CEO, Northwood Space
- Colin Kaepernick, Founder & CEO, Lumi
- Denise Dresser, CEO, Slack
- Erin and Sara Foster, Co-founders and General Partners, Oversubscribed Ventures
- Mary Barra, CEO, General Motors
- Matt Mullenweg, Co-Founder, WordPress and CEO, Automattic
- Vinod Khosla, Founder, Khosla Ventures
- Meet the rest of our speakers
Engage in 200+ deep-dive sessions
Participate in 50-minute interactive Q&A Breakout Sessions and 30-minute Roundtable discussions, where industry leaders tackle pressing challenges in the fast-changing tech landscape. Explore our expanding agenda for more details on these sessions.
Witness the intense startup battle
Experience the excitement as the top 20 hand-picked startups compete in the Startup Battlefield 200 pitch competition at the Disrupt Stage, vying for a $100,000 equity-free prize and the coveted Disrupt Cup. Top-tier VCs will judge the competition, providing invaluable feedback on what it takes to build a successful startup. Discover valuable lessons from the top contenders in this thrilling showdown.
Enhanced networking opportunities
Beyond casual networking throughout the venue, elevate your connections with the Braindate app, which lets you create or explore topics for more meaningful discussions. Meet in person at the Networking Lounge powered by Braindate on level 2 for 1:1 or small-group conversations.
60+ pre and after-hours Side Events
Keep the energy of Disrupt 2024 alive by joining company-hosted Side Events happening all week across San Francisco. From workshops and cocktail parties to morning runs and Meetups, there’s an activity for everyone to enjoy!
Register before rates rise
Grab the chance to save up to $400 on your ticket! You can also enjoy our Expo+ 2-for-1 deal, allowing you to bring a +1 for just half the cost of one Expo+ Pass. These limited-time offers end on October 27 at 11:59 p.m. PT, and ticket prices will go up when the event kicks off on October 28.
Technology
Classic survival horror is still alive and scaring
And a few decades later, developers are still finding ways to bring the most important elements of those games — namely, the mood and scares — to modern horror without feeling dated.
The most obvious way to do this is keeping the style and tone of classic survival horror while updating the gameplay to make it more approachable. The most recent example of this is Fear the Spotlight, the first release from horror movie studio Blumhouse’s new gaming label. Much like Crow Country and Signalis, it’s a game that looks like it was ripped right out of 1998; the visuals are blocky, the textures low-res. It gives the experience a grimy feel, which is just the right note for horror.
Fear the Spotlight — developed by the two-person team at Cozy Game Pals — starts out simple enough, with two friends breaking into their high school to perform a seance in the library. But, of course, things go bad, and they get pulled into a nightmare realm that connects both to their own pasts and a dark mystery the school has been hiding for decades. It’s part coming-of-age story, part romance, and part true crime. But it’s all rendered in the crunchy style of PlayStation-era horror, which lends it an uneasy edge.
The game also lets you really focus on the story by streamlining the gameplay. There’s a lot of puzzle-solving; much like in early Resident Evil games, you’ll be fixing all kinds of complex mechanical problems and dealing with arcane statues and locks. But there’s almost no actual combat. Instead, you have little choice but to run and hide when the terrifying monsters appear. Some of the scariest moments of the game have you huddled under a desk, waiting for the creatures — which have deadly spotlights for faces — to pass.
In some ways, removing combat makes the game even scarier since you have no way to fight back. These moments in Fear the Spotlight reminded me a bit of stowing away in a locker in Alien: Isolation, hoping the xenomorph couldn’t see me. The hazy, dirty visuals only amplify this feeling, as it’s often difficult to get a clear view of what’s ahead of you.
On the other side of the spectrum is the recent remake of Silent Hill 2. Instead of creating a brand-new survival horror experience with modern sensibilities, it’s an attempt to take one of the genre’s most influential titles — a particularly idiosyncratic one at that — and reimagine it as a big-budget release in 2024. That has pros and cons. Like the remakes of classic Resident Evil games and the original Dead Space, Silent Hill 2 looks and plays like a modern release. The visuals are crisp and detailed, instead of hazy and disorienting. And it controls like a well-tuned third-person action game. It’s immensely satisfying to swing a bat, whether you’re smashing in windows or fending off a living mannequin.
There’s a shift in tone. The modern Silent Hill 2 is still scary. The level of realism makes the squirming enemies and cramped hotel hallways feel incredibly unsettling, and there’s a level of immersion that can be panic-inducing. But now it plays and feels like a lot of other games and is, for lack of a better word, a lot cleaner than the original. It’s no longer as weird and distinct. It reminds me a bit of the 2018 remake of Shadow of the Colossus: a cover song that doesn’t replace the original but provides a different way of looking at it, one that’s welcoming for newcomers. (If only Konami made the original Silent Hill 2 more accessible.)
The point is, these games show there is still plenty of room to do interesting things with survival horror. And they do it in a way that both connected to the genre’s history without being stifled by it. More importantly: they find new ways to scare.
Fear the Spotlight and Silent Hill 2 are both available now.
Technology
Samsung scientists are working on a new type of memory that could bring RAM like speeds and SSD capacities together
Samsung has used advanced computer modeling to accelerate the development of Selector-Only Memory (SOM), a new memory technology that combines non-volatility with DRAM-like read/write speeds and stackability.
Building on the company’s earlier research in the field, SOM is based on cross-point memory architectures, similar to phase-change memory and resistive RAM (RRAM), where stacked arrays of electrodes are used. Typically, these architectures require a selector transistor or diode to address specific memory cells and prevent unintended electrical pathways.
Samsung has taken a novel approach by exploring chalcogenide-based materials that function as both the selector and the memory element, introducing a new form of non-volatile memory.
A broader search
eeNews Analog reports Samsung researchers will present their findings at this year’s International Electron Devices Meeting (IEDM), taking place from December 7 to 11, in San Francisco. The South Korean tech giant will discuss how it screened an extensive range of chalcogenide materials for SOM applications.
Samsung says its study explored over 4,000 material combinations, narrowing them down to 18 promising candidates using Ab-initio-based computer modeling (see the diagram at the top of the page). The focus was on improving threshold voltage drift and optimizing the memory window – two key factors in SOM performance.
Traditional SOM research has been limited to the use of Ge, As, and Se chalcogenide systems found in ovonic threshold switches (OTS). However, Samsung says its comprehensive modeling process allowed for a broader search, considering bonding characteristics, thermal stability, and device reliability to enhance performance and efficiency.
In a follow-up IEDM presentation, eeNews Analog reports, IMEC researchers will discuss potential atomic mechanisms, such as local atomic bond rearrangement and atomic segregation, that could explain how the selector component in SOM operates, further influencing threshold voltage – an important factor in memory performance.
More from TechRadar Pro
Technology
A major contributor to India’s growth story- The Week
The online gaming industry in India has been on a transformational journey with a promising growth trajectory, despite regulatory ambiguities and a high tax rate. Not only has it been a major contributor to the broader media & entertainment space but has also become an integral component of the Animation, Visual Effects, Gaming & Comics (AVGC) sector in India, drawing significant government support, with many states crafting their own AVGC policies to give a boost to the sector.
With over 1,400 homegrown online gaming companies, India’s online gaming sector is uniquely positioned to support the goals of our country’s economic growth ambitions, attract large foreign investments, generate sizeable employment, and spur innovation. Consequently, it has the potential and the necessary elements to become a global supplier and establish itself to become India’s soft power on the global front.
India hosts the second-largest community of gamers globally and has become a popular choice in the entertainment sector, which clearly reflects a transformative shift in the entertainment consumption pattern. With this being said, the online gaming industry goes beyond the premises of entertainment; it opens up opportunities in various other allied industries such as UI/UX design, data engineering, development, programming, testing, sales, branding & marketing, etc. It also fuels innovation in emerging sectors like AI/ML, cybersecurity & cloud, and fintech.
Currently, this sector alone provides over 1 lakh jobs to the skilled workforce of the country and is expected to add 1.5 lakh more by 2025. Further, with only 31% of the rural population using the internet compared to 67% of urban residents, as per the India Inequality Report 2022, there is a significant economic opportunity to increase internet access and digital inclusion in rural areas.
A recent report by the EGROW foundation and Primus Partners states that there has been a 20-fold increase in the workforce between 2018-2023, with a 97.56% compounding annual growth rate. In terms of workforce participation, the industry has significant male participation and was mostly viewed as a male-dominant industry for the longest time. But what truly stands out is the evolving gender dynamics in this space, with female workforce participation far outpacing male workforce participation, achieving a massive 103.15% CAGR in the same period.
Moreover, there has been a steady increase in female participation in gaming. As of 2022, about 43% of women engaged in online gaming daily, with most female participation from non-metro cities. Furthermore, the sector not only recognizes the contribution that women bring to the creative and business processes but also fosters a more inclusive environment for them to thrive. This is evident in the surge in female gaming content creators and streamers in the country.
The findings of the report also highlight the sector’s contribution to the AVGC industry, which is projected to rise 68% by 2026. The government has provided much-needed impetus to the industry by charting out a forward-looking path, constituting a task force, and setting up the first National Centre of Excellence solely dedicated to the AVGC industry.
However, for the industry to thrive and enter the next phase of growth, the government must come out with a national AVGC policy that has been in the works for some time.
Despite the tremendous growth seen by the industry, certain concerns pertaining to excessive screen time, addiction and financial fraud remain. This becomes even more critical in the context of teenagers and young adults who need to be made aware of responsible gaming practices. In this regard, the recent installation of ‘Beware of Smartphone Zombies’ signboards in Bengaluru is a stark reminder of the growing epidemic of digital distraction. While some of these concerns are being addressed by the industry, more can be done to safeguard vulnerable consumers. For instance, to limit exposure to screen time and mitigate financial risk for the consumer, features such as time limits, monetary limitations and exclusions have been introduced by several gaming platforms with the aid of technology.
Further online gaming platforms often require personal information such as name, age, contact details, and in case of real money gaming, also financial information. With this comes the risk of data breaches and related concerns such as identity theft leading to financial fraud. In this context, Know Your Customer (KYC) procedures play a critical role in helping protect both consumers as well as businesses from fraud. Further, online gaming intermediaries are required to process and store digital personal and non-personal data in compliance with the applicable data protection laws of India. However, until the Digital Personal Data Protection Act comes into force, this remains a voluntary effort.
Last but not the least, a sector which holds substantial economic promise deserves regulatory backing and clarity. For much of its existence, the industry has operated self-sufficiently, wherein the collective efforts of the industry have led the way for a more robust, responsible, and accountable ecosystem. However, regulatory ambiguities and uncertainties have time and again created roadblocks for Indian gaming startups, and therefore, it is necessary that regulatory clarity be provided, and as a first step, the amended IT rules be implemented.
With an encouraging regulatory environment, the online gaming industry, which has seen a 27.45% CAGR between 2019 to 2022, in its contribution towards the country’s GDP, can further enhance India’s growth story and solidify its position as a disrupter in the global gaming landscape.
(The author is a Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha, and former Minister of State for GAD, Education, Health, Maharashtra).
The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not purport to reflect the opinions or views of THE WEEK.
Technology
Venom, Joker, and the year of supervillain cinema
Mark Millar’s limited series Wanted, loosely adapted in 2008 into an atrocious movie, imagined a dystopian world where all the superheroes are dead and the supervillains have won. That’s kind of how the multiplex feels right now. Comic-book cinema, which towered over the competition a mere five years ago (it reached its popular peak in 2019, the year of Avengers: Endgame and Joker), has entered a state of ongoing commercial decline. Capes and cowls are no longer a sure thing at the box office; increasingly, it feels like we’ve stepped into a post-superhero age. And in the absence of the virtuously costumed, it’s supervillains — and antiheroes — who have fought for dominance over the screens of 2024.
This weekend, for example, marks the theatrical return of Venom, the erstwhile Spider-Man arch-nemesis, again divorced of any relationship to Marvel’s friendly neighborhood web-slinger. Venom: The Last Dance, which just opened in theaters everywhere, rounds out a whole trilogy of starring vehicles for Tom Hardy’s take on hapless journalist Eddie Brock and the trash-talking, long-tongued extraterrestrial who’s made a home inside his bulky body.
Need another fix of bad? The Last Dance arrives on the heels of Joker: Folie à Deux, the majorly underperforming musical sequel to Todd Phillips’ origin story for the most infamous madman from Batman’s gallery of rogues, the Clown Prince of Crime. And it anticipates another Sony spotlight for a Spidey foe, Kraven the Hunter, which is due this Christmas and belongs to the same weird, misbegotten franchise of Spider-Man movies without Spider-Man as the Venom series and this past spring’s baffling bit-player flop Madame Web. Hell, even the one bona fide comic-book-movie hit of the year, Deadpool & Wolverine, stars a character who began his fictional life as a villain, a quipping adversary of various X teams.
Not so long ago, any of these characters getting their very own movie would have been inconceivable. The mere existence of Kraven the Hunter is proof of how deeply Hollywood bought into the lie that anything Marvel- or DC-related could be a giant hit. Starring vehicles for supervillains feels like the natural next step (or maybe the last step, the point of termination) for a cash-cow genre that’s looked to back issues and more obscure corners of comicdom for available source material. You don’t get this year’s crop of bad-guy spectacles without the previous decade’s experiments in making second stringers into A-listers. There would likely be no Venom trilogy without the success of Guardians of the Galaxy or Suicide Squad.
To some extent, superhero cinema has worked back around to the ’90s, when the genre was basically Batman sequels and adaptations of cult comics like The Crow and Tank Girl and Judge Dredd. That was also the era when the big two publishers were lining up their own starring vehicles for the heavies of their respective universes. Again, Venom and Deadpool were both villains before they proved popular enough to get the antihero makeover, and to headline their own limited and ongoing series. In truth, this was always kind of a letdown. Venom, that slobbering rage monster, made for a pretty scary Spidey rival. Softening him into an “edgy” vigilante, a so-called “lethal enforcer,” was a waste of a good adversary.
This year’s unlikely supervillain movies suffer from a similar problem. They soften and brighten characters whose whole appeal was their rough edges and their darkness. The Venom movies are not without their pleasures, most of them courtesy of Hardy’s valiant effort to forge a screwball buddy comedy out of the symbiotic relationship between Eddie and his alien guest. But Venom has always been cooler as a villain, a vengeful anti-Spider-Man, and the movies never approach the fearsomeness that made him such a popular character in the first place. Imagine flashing back to 1988 and telling a reader that not only would Venom one day get his own trilogy of movies but that he’d be reduced to a one-man Midnight Run, a glorified mismatched-partner routine.
Likewise, Joker: Folie à Deux buys so fully into the idea that Joaquin Phoenix’s Arthur Fleck is a misunderstood misfit — destined for infamy only because he was abandoned by the system — that it leeches the character of all his psychotic power. You don’t have to be an incensed fanboy to recognize that turning the Joker into a pitiable sadsack is a delating approach to one of the most flavorfully outsized villains in all of comics. And if Deadpool has been a superhero for a lot longer than he was a supervillain, it’s still odd to see his trilogy of movies undercut their anarchic, sarcastic spirit with warm-and-fuzzies. Who was clamoring for a Deadpool with big feels? Are we really supposed to care about the crime-fighting dreams of a psychotic assassin who breaks the fourth wall at every opportunity?
The Venom and Joker films — along with Suicide Squad and Morbius and one must presume the forthcoming Kraven the Hunter — run into the same daunting obstacle, which is that it’s hard to build a conventional movie around characters that work best in opposition to the superhero, as a distorting mirror or foil or hurdle. All of them get around that problem by essentially turning their villains into more virtuous, upstanding, or even conflicted versions of themselves… which ends up violating what’s special about them. It’s actually hard to imagine a Venom or Joker movie that embraced the more twisted (or #twisted) aspects of either, because where would the rooting interest lie? You’d have something like The Fly or Natural Born Killers — which, no, that sounds pretty good, actually. What we got instead was de facto superhero movies in supervillain drag.
These films evoke the grimdark ’90s in another way, one that should be much less comforting for studio executives. That decade wasn’t just the era when comics were locked in an arms race of excessive edginess, with both Marvel and DC — along with Image, a publisher that was edginess all the time — pushing superheroes into the ethically cloudy arena of antiheroism. It was also a time of boom and bust for the comics industry, when an explosion of big sales and collector investment earlier in the decade lead to a rapid decline in interest, culminating in Marvel filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy at the end of 1996. Maybe superhero cinema is following a similar trajectory, sputtering out with a run of stories for the tortured bad boys of their roster. At the end of the parade, the rapscallions briefly take the spotlight.
But in the words of one of the genre’s biggest and best hits, maybe the night is darkest before the dawn. Which is to say, maybe there’s a glimmer of something brighter on the horizon, past these (mostly unsuccessful) flirtations with the dark side of the superhero industrial complex. The bad guys had their moment this year. Don’t be surprised if the medium’s most iconic character, a man who puts the super in superhero, kicks off a comeback for the good guys next year.
Venom: The Last Dance is now playing in theaters everywhere. Joker: Folie à Deux is playing in a dwindling number of theaters everywhere. For more of A.A. Dowd’s writing, visit his Authory page.
Technology
Google’s Pixel Tablet is up to $110 off right now
Update 10/26/24 9am ET: The deal below has expired, but you can get a similar deal on the Pixel Tablet at Wellbots right now. The Pixel Tablet with its charging speaker dock is $110 off and down to $489 when you use the code ENGPIX110 at checkout. You can use the same code to get $110 off the 256GB Pixel Tablet on its own, bringing the final price down to $389.
Tablets might be a cheaper alternative to laptops but they can still cost a good chunk of money. Sales make all the difference and, right now, the 128GB Google Pixel Tablet is available for $275, down from $399. The 31 percent discount brings this tablet to a new all-time low price. The sale is only available if you get the tablet in Porcelain and doesn’t come with the speaker dock (though that combo is 11 percent off).
Google released this Pixel Tablet in summer 2023 and gave us things we really liked and others we weren’t wowed with. We gave it an 84 in our review thanks, in large part, to its smart home features. Our reviewer, Cherlynn Low, already had a Nest Mini in her room, but was impressed with how much better the tablet worked. The sound is great — though that was thanks to the Speaker Dock — and its Hub Mode is very useful. It shows you all the devices throughout your home, including camera feeds and switch lamps.
If you want this device for entertainment and ease then it could be great. However, there were a few aspects that we weren’t as keen on. Some of the movements aren’t very intuitive and we didn’t use it much without the stand. But, it has great battery if you do get it without a dock, lasting 21 and a half hours with 50 percent brightness on our test.
Follow @EngadgetDeals on Twitter and subscribe to the Engadget Deals newsletter for the latest tech deals and buying advice.
-
Technology1 month ago
Is sharing your smartphone PIN part of a healthy relationship?
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
How to unsnarl a tangle of threads, according to physics
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Hyperelastic gel is one of the stretchiest materials known to science
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
‘Running of the bulls’ festival crowds move like charged particles
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Maxwell’s demon charges quantum batteries inside of a quantum computer
-
Technology1 month ago
Would-be reality TV contestants ‘not looking real’
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
X-rays reveal half-billion-year-old insect ancestor
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Sunlight-trapping device can generate temperatures over 1000°C
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Liquid crystals could improve quantum communication devices
-
Technology4 weeks ago
Ukraine is using AI to manage the removal of Russian landmines
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Quantum ‘supersolid’ matter stirred using magnets
-
TV3 weeks ago
সারাদেশে দিনব্যাপী বৃষ্টির পূর্বাভাস; সমুদ্রবন্দরে ৩ নম্বর সংকেত | Weather Today | Jamuna TV
-
Technology3 weeks ago
Samsung Passkeys will work with Samsung’s smart home devices
-
News3 weeks ago
Massive blasts in Beirut after renewed Israeli air strikes
-
Football3 weeks ago
Rangers & Celtic ready for first SWPL derby showdown
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Physicists have worked out how to melt any material
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
A new kind of experiment at the Large Hadron Collider could unravel quantum reality
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Laser helps turn an electron into a coil of mass and charge
-
Womens Workouts1 month ago
3 Day Full Body Women’s Dumbbell Only Workout
-
Sport3 weeks ago
Boxing: World champion Nick Ball set for Liverpool homecoming against Ronny Rios
-
News3 weeks ago
▶ Hamas Spent $1B on Tunnels Instead of Investing in a Future for Gaza’s People
-
News3 weeks ago
Navigating the News Void: Opportunities for Revitalization
-
MMA3 weeks ago
‘Uncrowned queen’ Kayla Harrison tastes blood, wants UFC title run
-
News3 weeks ago
‘Blacks for Trump’ and Pennsylvania progressives play for undecided voters
-
Business3 weeks ago
When to tip and when not to tip
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Why this is a golden age for life to thrive across the universe
-
MMA3 weeks ago
Dana White’s Contender Series 74 recap, analysis, winner grades
-
Technology4 weeks ago
Microphone made of atom-thick graphene could be used in smartphones
-
MMA3 weeks ago
Pereira vs. Rountree prediction: Champ chases legend status
-
Sport3 weeks ago
Wales fall to second loss of WXV against Italy
-
Sport3 weeks ago
Man City ask for Premier League season to be DELAYED as Pep Guardiola escalates fixture pile-up row
-
Business3 weeks ago
DoJ accuses Donald Trump of ‘private criminal effort’ to overturn 2020 election
-
Football3 weeks ago
Why does Prince William support Aston Villa?
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Quantum forces used to automatically assemble tiny device
-
Technology4 weeks ago
Russia is building ground-based kamikaze robots out of old hoverboards
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
ITER: Is the world’s biggest fusion experiment dead after new delay to 2035?
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
A slight curve helps rocks make the biggest splash
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Nerve fibres in the brain could generate quantum entanglement
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Nuclear fusion experiment overcomes two key operating hurdles
-
News1 month ago
▶️ Hamas in the West Bank: Rising Support and Deadly Attacks You Might Not Know About
-
Technology1 month ago
Meta has a major opportunity to win the AI hardware race
-
Technology1 month ago
Why Machines Learn: A clever primer makes sense of what makes AI possible
-
Technology3 weeks ago
This AI video generator can melt, crush, blow up, or turn anything into cake
-
Technology3 weeks ago
Gmail gets redesigned summary cards with more data & features
-
MMA3 weeks ago
Julianna Peña trashes Raquel Pennington’s behavior as champ
-
Sport3 weeks ago
Aaron Ramsdale: Southampton goalkeeper left Arsenal for more game time
-
MMA3 weeks ago
Ketlen Vieira vs. Kayla Harrison pick, start time, odds: UFC 307
-
Sport3 weeks ago
2024 ICC Women’s T20 World Cup: Pakistan beat Sri Lanka
-
Entertainment3 weeks ago
New documentary explores actor Christopher Reeve’s life and legacy
-
Technology3 weeks ago
Musk faces SEC questions over X takeover
-
News3 weeks ago
Woman who died of cancer ‘was misdiagnosed on phone call with GP’
-
Technology3 weeks ago
Microsoft just dropped Drasi, and it could change how we handle big data
-
Money3 weeks ago
Wetherspoons issues update on closures – see the full list of five still at risk and 26 gone for good
-
News3 weeks ago
Family plans to honor hurricane victim using logs from fallen tree that killed him
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
How to wrap your mind around the real multiverse
-
Science & Environment1 month ago
Time travel sci-fi novel is a rip-roaringly good thought experiment
-
Sport3 weeks ago
China Open: Carlos Alcaraz recovers to beat Jannik Sinner in dramatic final
-
Sport3 weeks ago
Sturm Graz: How Austrians ended Red Bull’s title dominance
-
Business3 weeks ago
Bank of England warns of ‘future stress’ from hedge fund bets against US Treasuries
-
Business3 weeks ago
Sterling slides after Bailey says BoE could be ‘a bit more aggressive’ on rates
-
Technology3 weeks ago
Texas is suing TikTok for allegedly violating its new child privacy law
-
Business3 weeks ago
The search for Japan’s ‘lost’ art
-
Technology3 weeks ago
The best budget robot vacuums for 2024
-
MMA3 weeks ago
Pereira vs. Rountree preview show live stream
-
MMA3 weeks ago
‘I was fighting on automatic pilot’ at UFC 306
-
Technology3 weeks ago
The best shows on Max (formerly HBO Max) right now
-
News1 month ago
▶️ Media Bias: How They Spin Attack on Hezbollah and Ignore the Reality
-
Sport4 weeks ago
World’s sexiest referee Claudia Romani shows off incredible figure in animal print bikini on South Beach
-
Technology4 weeks ago
Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney renews blast at ‘gatekeeper’ platform owners
-
Science & Environment3 weeks ago
Markets watch for dangers of further escalation
-
Business3 weeks ago
Chancellor Rachel Reeves says she needs to raise £20bn. How might she do it?
-
News3 weeks ago
German Car Company Declares Bankruptcy – 200 Employees Lose Their Jobs
-
Technology3 weeks ago
OpenAI secured more billions, but there’s still capital left for other startups
-
MMA3 weeks ago
UFC 307 preview show: Will Alex Pereira’s wild ride continue, or does Khalil Rountree shock the world?
-
Business3 weeks ago
Stark difference in UK and Ireland’s budgets
-
Sport3 weeks ago
Coco Gauff stages superb comeback to reach China Open final
-
Technology3 weeks ago
J.B. Hunt and UP.Labs launch venture lab to build logistics startups
-
News3 weeks ago
Hull KR 10-8 Warrington Wolves – Robins reach first Super League Grand Final
-
Health & fitness3 weeks ago
NHS surgeon who couldn’t find his scalpel cut patient’s chest open with the penknife he used to slice up his lunch
-
Business3 weeks ago
Head of UK Competition Appeal Tribunal to step down after rebuke for serious misconduct
-
Technology3 weeks ago
If you’ve ever considered smart glasses, this Amazon deal is for you
-
MMA3 weeks ago
Alex Pereira faces ‘trap game’ vs. Khalil Rountree
-
Football3 weeks ago
Simo Valakari: New St Johnstone boss says Scotland special in his heart
-
Politics3 weeks ago
Rosie Duffield’s savage departure raises difficult questions for Keir Starmer. He’d be foolish to ignore them | Gaby Hinsliff
-
Money3 weeks ago
Pub selling Britain’s ‘CHEAPEST’ pints for just £2.60 – but you’ll have to follow super-strict rules to get in
-
News3 weeks ago
Balancing India and China Is the Challenge for Sri Lanka’s Dissanayake
-
TV3 weeks ago
Love Island star sparks feud rumours as one Islander is missing from glam girls’ night
-
News1 month ago
the pick of new debut fiction
-
News1 month ago
Our millionaire neighbour blocks us from using public footpath & screams at us in street.. it’s like living in a WARZONE – WordupNews
-
Business4 weeks ago
Stocks Tumble in Japan After Party’s Election of New Prime Minister
-
News3 weeks ago
Liverpool secure win over Bologna on a night that shows this format might work
-
MMA3 weeks ago
Kayla Harrison gets involved in nasty war of words with Julianna Pena and Ketlen Vieira
-
News3 weeks ago
Heavy strikes shake Beirut as Israel expands Lebanon campaign
-
TV3 weeks ago
Phillip Schofield accidentally sets his camp on FIRE after using emergency radio to Channel 5 crew
-
News3 weeks ago
Heartbreaking end to search as body of influencer, 27, found after yacht party shipwreck on ‘Devil’s Throat’ coastline
-
Technology3 weeks ago
Apple iPhone 16 Plus vs Samsung Galaxy S24+
-
News3 weeks ago
Reach CEO Jim Mullen: If government advertises with us, we’ll employ more reporters
-
Technology3 weeks ago
Popular financial newsletter claims Roblox enables child sexual abuse
-
Travel2 weeks ago
UK’s ‘happiest islands’ have white sand beaches and attractions older than the Egyptian pyramids
-
MMA4 weeks ago
How to watch Salt Lake City title fights, lineup, odds, more
You must be logged in to post a comment Login