Yahoo! News: World - China
Yahoo! News: World - China |
- Tucker Carlson and Caitlyn Jenner debate Trump and transgender rights
- Limbaugh Slams Trump for 'caving' On Border Wall
- Obama to Trump: Inside the County That Helped Flip the Election in Pennsylvania
- US Supreme Court takes narrow view on tribal immunity
- Army Veteran Tied Service Dog to Tree, Shot It 5 Times on Camera: Cops
- Large Rabbit Dies On United Flight To U.S.
- Battling ISIS in Hatra, Iraq, and more: April 26 in photos
- New Video Shows United Passenger Before Dragging Incident
- A look at immigrants in the US without legal status
- Watergate journalist Carl Bernstein on Trump-Russia investigation: 'Oh my god, there's a cover-up going on'
- America Is Getting Used to Trump’s Insanity
- U.S. slams South Sudan's Kiir over 'man-made' famine, urges truce
- Lawyers want Aaron Hernandez's murder conviction dismissed
- Dragged United passenger 'aggressive', officers say
- 8 paid iPhone apps on sale for free right now
- Unicorn frappucinos are dead. Long live dragon frappuccinos.
- Ivanka Trump booed by audience in Germany
- Hezbollah's defiant signal to Israel, Lebanon, and the UN
- US and Canada's very different takes on Donald Trump and Justin Trudeau phone call over lumber and milk trade
- US Navy fires warning flare at Iran vessel in Persian Gulf
- Defying crackdown, Venezuelans stage new march
- Former ‘Bachelor’ Chris Soules Speaks Out After Deadly Accident
- Long-Range Bull: Driving a 250,000-Mile Lamborghini Murcielago
- Behold: This Galaxy Note 8 blows the Galaxy S8 out of the water
- What we do in the next 5 years will determine the fate of the melting Arctic
- AP Photos: Chernobyl's ghost town draws daring visitors
- Donald Trump administration loses trade battle over tuna as WTO lets Mexico hit US with sanctions
- Netanyahu snubs German minister over plan to meet rights groups
- Afghanistan arrests 35 soldiers after attack on base
- Delaware State Police trooper fatally shot outside convenience store; suspect barricaded
- ‘Pokémon Go’ ‘PokeSensor’ & ‘PokeSearch’ Trackers Shut Down By Niantic
- Amazon’s $96 sound bar is so good it doesn’t need a separate subwoofer
- Amazon's New Echo Look Makes Alexa the Fashion Police
- 8 Popular Part-Time Jobs for Retirees
- NFL prospect denies rape report made to police; no charges
- Voices from overseas: People from around the world consider Trump's first 100 days
- Sudan accuses South Sudan president of meeting rebels
- Foreign extremists killed in Philippine clash: military
- 'Bachelor' Held Behind Bars: Reality TV Star Charged in Fatal Hit and Run
- This Mom's Viral Facebook Post Explains Why She Doesn't Teach Her Son to Share
- Two accessories that make Amazon’s Echo Dot so much better
- Judge Rules Against Apple’s Policy On Refurbished iPad Replacements
- Tesla Model S Loses Top Ratings Spot
- Arizona man convicted of killing best friend, woman, 4 kids
- House Freedom Caucus announces support for new Republican healthcare bill to replace Obamacare
- Bloomberg on the roles of Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner in the Trump White House
- Senate race ahead for suspended Alabama chief justice Moore
- 1,000 shot in Chicago so far this year
Tucker Carlson and Caitlyn Jenner debate Trump and transgender rights Posted: 25 Apr 2017 08:40 AM PDT |
Limbaugh Slams Trump for 'caving' On Border Wall Posted: 25 Apr 2017 12:02 PM PDT |
Obama to Trump: Inside the County That Helped Flip the Election in Pennsylvania Posted: 25 Apr 2017 07:22 AM PDT |
US Supreme Court takes narrow view on tribal immunity Posted: 25 Apr 2017 10:28 AM PDT The US Supreme Court took a narrow view Tuesday on the immunity from lawsuits enjoyed by Native American tribes, which are treated in some respects like sovereign states that cannot be sued in American courts. In a case involving a limousine driver who rear-ended a car on a Connecticut freeway, the highest court in the land ruled unanimously that tribal employees do not always have immunity when involved in incidents that take place far from reservations. The justices revived a civil lawsuit filed by the injured occupants of the car in state court, overturning the Connecticut Supreme Court's decision to dismiss the case because the driver worked for the Mohegan Tribe, which runs a casino in the state. |
Army Veteran Tied Service Dog to Tree, Shot It 5 Times on Camera: Cops Posted: 26 Apr 2017 03:01 PM PDT |
Large Rabbit Dies On United Flight To U.S. Posted: 26 Apr 2017 07:30 AM PDT |
Battling ISIS in Hatra, Iraq, and more: April 26 in photos Posted: 26 Apr 2017 01:09 PM PDT Iraqi paramilitary troops fire toward Islamic State militants during a battle on the outskirts of the ancient city of Hatra, near Mosul, Iraq; the robes of Pope Francis are blown over his head by a gust of wind as he delivers his homily during the weekly audience in St. Peter's Square in Vatican City; and demonstrators in Minsk, Belarus, mark the 31st anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant disaster. |
New Video Shows United Passenger Before Dragging Incident Posted: 25 Apr 2017 08:39 AM PDT |
A look at immigrants in the US without legal status Posted: 25 Apr 2017 08:20 AM PDT |
Posted: 26 Apr 2017 01:21 PM PDT Famed Watergate journalist Carl Bernstein says that the investigation into former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn could end up revealing a "cover-up" of alleged connections between President Donald Trump's team and Russia. "There, he is central to what the FBI believes is a cover-up going on among people close to the president of the United States about what happened with the Trump campaign and Russia," Mr Bernstein, who is now a CNN commentator, said. |
America Is Getting Used to Trump’s Insanity Posted: 25 Apr 2017 12:39 PM PDT |
U.S. slams South Sudan's Kiir over 'man-made' famine, urges truce Posted: 25 Apr 2017 12:32 PM PDT By Michelle Nichols UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - The United States slammed South Sudan's President Salva Kiir on Tuesday for the African state's "man-made" famine and ongoing conflict, urging him to fulfill a month-old pledge of a unilateral truce by ordering his troops back to their barracks. "We must see a sign that progress is possible," U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley told a United Nations Security Council briefing on South Sudan. "We must see that ceasefire implemented." South Sudan descended into civil war in 2013 after Kiir fired his deputy, unleashing a conflict that has spawned armed factions often following ethnic lines. |
Lawyers want Aaron Hernandez's murder conviction dismissed Posted: 25 Apr 2017 01:28 PM PDT |
Dragged United passenger 'aggressive', officers say Posted: 25 Apr 2017 11:34 AM PDT Newly released reports from security officers at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport paint an unflattering picture of the man dragged from a United Airlines flight, setting off a worldwide uproar. The documents, requested by US media outlets which reported on their contents Tuesday, say passenger David Dao was "aggressive," and that one of the three officers attempting to remove him from his seat on United Flight 3411 had lost his grip when Dao flailed his arms, causing the 69-year-old to fall and injure himself. The reports also for the first time identified the three Chicago Department of Aviation officers on the plane, one of whom wrote that they had used "minimal but necessary force" to remove Dao from the packed flight to Louisville, Kentucky. |
8 paid iPhone apps on sale for free right now Posted: 25 Apr 2017 10:59 AM PDT Rumors surrounding the iPhone 8 are swirling right now, but they're still a bit hazy in some key areas. Should we expect an in-screen Touch ID sensor? Should we expect a dual-lens camera on every new iPhone model? We don't have any answer for you yet on that front, but at least you can expect fresh new paid iPhone and iPad apps on sale for free each day. We've rounded up the best of the bunch, as we always do, and you'll find them all laid out below. These are paid iPhone and iPad apps that have been made available for free for a limited time by their developers. There is no way to tell how long they will be free. These sales could end an hour from now or a week from now — obviously, the only thing we can guarantee is that they were free at the time this post was written. If you click on a link and see a price listed next to an app instead of the word "get," it is no longer free. The sale has ended. If you download the app, you will be charged. LilyNormally $1.99.
BoomBarNormally $0.99.
Protect Your SMSNormally $1.99.
Thermo-HygrometerNormally $1.99.
Blocs WaveNormally $2.99.
Note-Ify NotesNormally $0.99.
Stripe Wallpaper GeneratorNormally $0.99.
Download Stripe Wallpaper Generator Animated Pixel EmojiNormally $0.99.
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Unicorn frappucinos are dead. Long live dragon frappuccinos. Posted: 26 Apr 2017 12:27 PM PDT A couple days ago, we suggested other mythical creatures who are not unicorns that deserve to have their own frappuccinos. Little did we know, one of those frappuccinos was indeed developing in the shadows of the unicorn frappuccino. And now, with the unicorn frappuccino run officially over at Starbucks, that new frappuccino has come into the spotlight. Introducing the dragon frappuccino. SEE ALSO: Starbucks baristas are now creating 'unicorn lemonade' and there's no end to this 109/365: I apologized profusely to my barista before ordering the basic AF #unicornfrappuccino - thankfully they were out of the ingredients and offered me something not only cooler and better tasting, but easier to make: the #dragonfrappuccino @starbucks #ionlyordereditbecauseitmatchesmyhair A post shared by Mercy Martin 濾 (@heyymercyy) on Apr 19, 2017 at 9:34pm PDT It appears that some Starbucks locations, such as the one in the Instagram picture above, had run out of ingredients to make the insanely popular Unicorn Frappuccino. So instead, baristas offered a new, unofficial concoction: the dragon frappuccino. In fact, at least one location tried to make the drink official with sign that proclaimed it as a store exclusive. However, since it's not a product made by Starbucks HQ, you probably won't be able to find it in the majority of stores and the recipes vary. A post shared by Varin Thorn (@varin_thorn) on Apr 21, 2017 at 9:05pm PDT Many Instagram posts have explained that it's a green tea frappuccino with vanilla bean powder and a berry swirl on the inside of the cup. One post saw the green tea being mixed with dried blueberries to create the purple color along with the green. A Starbucks created this to replace the unicorn frappuccino so we duplicated it and it's yummy!!! #dragonfrappuccino A post shared by Smith's Starbucks (@starbucks.smiths) on Apr 26, 2017 at 9:58am PDT We think the moral of the story is that people are starting to become more and more creative in either what they create at Starbucks or what they force their baristas to create. And then we just slap a catchy name to it. So long live creativity and frappuccinos. WATCH: Woman uses Starbucks Unicorn Frappuccino to spread some magical news to her husband |
Ivanka Trump booed by audience in Germany Posted: 25 Apr 2017 07:12 AM PDT |
Hezbollah's defiant signal to Israel, Lebanon, and the UN Posted: 25 Apr 2017 01:26 PM PDT The stated objective of the Hezbollah-coordinated press tour of southern Lebanon was to see new Israeli defensive installations on the border – indications, according to the powerful Shiite Lebanese militia, of Israeli fears of Hezbollah's growing military might. The unprecedented spectacle appeared to be a deliberate and calculated breach of a UN Security Council resolution that bans non-state forces from bearing arms in southern Lebanon, and it illustrated the unmatched sway Hezbollah wields, and the impunity it enjoys throughout the country. Recommended: Hezbollah 101: Who is the militant group, and what does it want? |
Posted: 26 Apr 2017 01:35 AM PDT |
US Navy fires warning flare at Iran vessel in Persian Gulf Posted: 26 Apr 2017 03:57 AM PDT |
Defying crackdown, Venezuelans stage new march Posted: 25 Apr 2017 06:42 PM PDT Venezuelan protesters planned a new march Wednesday against President Nicolas Maduro, defying his government despite the deaths of more than 25 people in an increasingly violent political crisis. Twenty-six people have died so far this month in violence around the protests, including four minors, according to Attorney General Luisa Ortega. Maduro put the figure at 29 deaths in a speech Tuesday evening, without giving details. |
Former ‘Bachelor’ Chris Soules Speaks Out After Deadly Accident Posted: 26 Apr 2017 07:27 AM PDT |
Long-Range Bull: Driving a 250,000-Mile Lamborghini Murcielago Posted: 25 Apr 2017 01:18 PM PDT |
Behold: This Galaxy Note 8 blows the Galaxy S8 out of the water Posted: 25 Apr 2017 05:51 AM PDT Samsung's Galaxy S8 and Galaxy S8+ were finally released this past Friday, and it seems like the phones are already well on their way to becoming a smash hit. The South Korean electronics giant announced Monday morning that combined Galaxy S8 and S8+ pre-orders out-sold Samsung's previous-generation Galaxy S7 and S7 edge by 30%. As a quick reminder, the S7 and S7 edge were Samsung's best-selling phones ever. If you picked up a new Galaxy S8 on Friday or over the weekend, rest assured that you now hold the most stunning smartphones that have ever existed. They're also two of the most powerful smartphones that have ever existed. In fact, there's almost nothing on Earth that could possibly give you buyer's remorse. Almost nothing... When an early adopter buys a new flagship iPhone, he or she knows that there will be a full year to wait (and save up money) before an even better new flagship iPhone launches. In Samsung's case, however, there's a much shorter buffer in between flagship releases. In the first half of each year, Samsung updates its Galaxy S lineup. The Galaxy S8 and Galaxy S8+ are the company's flagship smartphones for the first half of 2017 and as you read in our Galaxy S8 review, they're incredible. Then, in the second half of 2017, Samsung will update its Note line with the all-new Galaxy Note 8. If the Note 8 looks anything like this, Galaxy S8 and S8+ owners should prepare to be very, very jealous. Graphic designer Muhsin M. Belaal Auckburaully teamed up with YouTube channel DBS Designing to completely reimagine Samsung's Galaxy Note series using design cues from the Galaxy S8 along with rumors we've heard so far. The results, as you can see, are absolutely stunning. Unlike most concept smartphones we see out there, this Galaxy Note 8 is actually rooted in reality. It likely doesn't look exactly like the Note 8 Samsung will release later this year, but we're willing to bet that it's close. Hopefully Samsung sticks with the precedent set by the Galaxy S8, however, and ditches that distracting logo from the front of the phone. As for specs, Auckburaully stays well within the realm of reality by sticking with the rumors we've heard so far. The Note 8 should feature a huge 6.4-inch QHD+ display and a screen-to-body ratio that's even better than the 83% ratio on the Galaxy S8. Other expected specs include 6GB of RAM, 64GB or 128GB of storage, microSDXC support, a new dual-lens rear camera setup, an iris scanner, and a huge 4,000 mAh battery that hopefully doesn't explode. More images of Auckburaully's Galaxy Note 8 design can be seen on his Behance page, and a video featuring the design is embedded below. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c0p3CAs9ZP0 |
What we do in the next 5 years will determine the fate of the melting Arctic Posted: 25 Apr 2017 02:39 PM PDT Global warming has pushed the Arctic into a new state unprecedented in human history, with thinning and retreating sea ice, skyrocketing air and sea temperatures, melting permafrost, and glaciers that are shedding ice at increasing rates. All of these impacts and more may seem remote at first — after all, few of us live in Nunavut — but if you're a coastal resident anywhere in the world, from New York City to Dhaka, Bangladesh, what happens in the Arctic will affect you during the next several decades and beyond, primarily through sea level rise. SEE ALSO: Trump White House reveals it's 'not familiar' with well-studied costs of global warming The economic effects of all Arctic warming impacts may be enough to dent the gross domestic product of some countries, with cost estimates ranging from $7 trillion to $90 trillion by the end of this century. These are the conclusions of a new, comprehensive assessment of the Arctic climate by a division of the Arctic Council — a cooperative, governing body that helps oversee development in the Far North. Sea ice (TOP) meets land as seen from NASA's Operation IceBridge research aircraft above Greenland.Image: Mario Tama/Getty ImagesThe scientific report, released on Tuesday, is known as Snow, Water, Ice, and Permafrost in the Arctic, or SWIPA. About 90 scientists helped produce the report, while more than two-dozen experts peer-reviewed the results. The document contains two key findings that anyone concerned about the future of not just the Arctic, but the entire globe, should take note of. The first is that the Arctic Ocean could be free of summer sea ice starting as early as the late 2030s, which is earlier than other estimates have shown. The second is that rapid Arctic warming is driving greater melting of land ice in the region, which led scientists to conclude that consensus projections of global sea level rise made in 2013 are too conservative. Compared to the previous SWIPA report, which was produced in 2011, the new assessment paints a far more dire picture of an Arctic climate in overdrive. It also offers hope that action can be taken now to slow down and eventually stabilize Arctic warming after about the year 2050. But time is running out. Even with rapid action to curb global warming pollutants like carbon dioxide and methane, the Arctic most of us grew up with — featuring thick sea ice making the region virtually impenetrable year-round — is gone, and is not likely to return anytime in the next century. Sea ice thickness trends, showing the thinning trend in recent years.Image: zack labe"... The Arctic of today is different in many respects from the Arctic of the past century, or even the Arctic of 20 years ago," the report states. "Many of the changes underway are due to a simple fact: Ice, snow, and frozen ground — the components of the Arctic cryosphere — are sensitive to heat." Based on computer model projections, the report states that average fall and winter temperatures in the Arctic will increase up to 5 degrees Celsius, or 9 degrees Fahrenheit, above late 20th century values by the middle of the century, even if relatively stringent greenhouse gas emissions cuts are made. Such temperature thresholds are already being reached in some months, with January 2016 recording a temperature anomaly of 9 degrees Fahrenheit above the 1981-2010 average for the region, with even higher anomalies seen during October through February of the same year. This past winter was the warmest on record for the Arctic, and for the third straight year, Arctic sea ice peaked at a record low level during the winter. This has left sea ice in a precariously thin and sparse state as the upcoming melt season nears. The report contains valuable findings on what would happen to Arctic climate change if the world were to come close to meeting the goals set by the Paris Climate Agreement. That treaty, which went into force in November 2016, aims to keep global warming to well under 2 degrees Celsius, or 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit, above preindustrial levels through the year 2100. It's unclear whether the agreement's goals are still feasible, considering that the U.S. — the world's second-largest emitter — is considering pulling out of it altogether, and other nations have yet to offer plans to cut their emissions in line with the temperature target. A "drunken forest" in Fairbanks Alaska where trees are collapsing into the ground due to permafrost melt.Image: Warming Images/REX/ShutterstockMeeting the Paris targets would help slow the pace and reduce the severity of Arctic warming, but it "would not stabilize the loss of Arctic glaciers, ice sheets, and ice caps," the report states. "The recent SWIPA assessment tells that the changes in the Arctic are bound to continue at the current rate until mid-century," said Morten Skovgaard Olsen, who chaired the new report, in an email. "But it also tells that immediate and ambitious green-house gas reductions will slow the speed of changes beyond mid-century and even stabilize change beyond mid century, preventing major further impacts associated with the Arctic melt ." Any carbon pollution cuts made now will have the most significant influence on what the Arctic will look like after about 2050, the report's authors said at a press conference Tuesday in Virginia. "The changes are cumulative, and so what we do in the next 5 years is really important on slowing down the changes that will happen in the next 30 or 40 years," said James Overland, a climate scientist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. "The emphasis on action and immediacy is one of the main findings" from the report, he said. NASA project scientist Nathan Kurtz surveys an iceberg locked in sea ice near Pituffik, Greenland.Image: mario tama/Getty ImagesForeign ministers from the eight Arctic nations will meet in Fairbanks, Alaska on May 11 to discuss these findings and other issues pertaining to the region. Some discussion on the Paris agreement may take place, particularly along the sidelines of the talks. According to the SWIPA report, meltwater from Arctic glaciers has contributed 35 percent of current sea level rise, with the greatest contribution coming from Greenland. The planet's largest island lost an average of 375 gigatons of ice per year. This is equivalent to losing a block of ice measuring 4.6 miles on all sides, from 2011 to 2014 alone. It amounts to twice the melt rate from 2003 to 2008. In addition, thawing permafrost is harming infrastructure from Alaska to Siberia, with landslides and mysterious craters swallowing parts of the Russian Arctic. In Alaska, the report found that wildfires in taiga forests are worse now than at any time in the past 10,000 years, due to hotter, drier summers and earlier spring snowmelt. WATCH: Stunning drone footage captures rare video of blue whales feeding |
AP Photos: Chernobyl's ghost town draws daring visitors Posted: 26 Apr 2017 08:26 AM PDT |
Donald Trump administration loses trade battle over tuna as WTO lets Mexico hit US with sanctions Posted: 26 Apr 2017 02:17 AM PDT The US has just lost a major trade battle with Mexico and it revolved around tuna. On Tuesday, the World Trade Organisation ruled that Mexico is allowed to impose $163m (£127m) a year in sanctions against the US on trade in tuna, ending a years-long dispute. The clash, which dates back to 2008, centred on the US insisting that any Mexican tuna sold in the US must have a 'dolphin safe' guarantee, meaning that no dolphins were killed by fishermen catching the tuna. |
Netanyahu snubs German minister over plan to meet rights groups Posted: 25 Apr 2017 01:56 PM PDT By Madeline Chambers and Jeffrey Heller BERLIN/JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu canceled talks on Tuesday with Germany's visiting foreign minister, snubbing Sigmar Gabriel over his decision to meet groups critical of Israel's treatment of Palestinians. The dispute threatened to widen a rift between Israel and Germany over the Palestinian issue. Berlin has been increasingly critical of the settlement policies of Netanyahu's right-wing government in occupied territory Palestinians seek for a state. |
Afghanistan arrests 35 soldiers after attack on base Posted: 25 Apr 2017 05:37 PM PDT Authorities have arrested 35 soldiers who served on an army base in northern Afghanistan where the Taliban staged a deadly attack last week, officials said Wednesday, as fears grew they had inside help. The defence ministry released its official toll of 135 recruits killed in the assault on the sprawling base, home to the 209th Army Corps, outside the city of Mazar-i-Sharif in Balkh province on Friday. The brutal assault is believed to be the deadliest-ever Taliban attack on a military installation. |
Delaware State Police trooper fatally shot outside convenience store; suspect barricaded Posted: 26 Apr 2017 02:39 PM PDT |
‘Pokémon Go’ ‘PokeSensor’ & ‘PokeSearch’ Trackers Shut Down By Niantic Posted: 25 Apr 2017 07:46 AM PDT |
Amazon’s $96 sound bar is so good it doesn’t need a separate subwoofer Posted: 26 Apr 2017 05:20 AM PDT It used to be that if you wanted to add decent sound to your TV, you need to spend upwards of $1,000 on a surround sound system. The the home audio market got much more competitive, and prices began to fall. Things really took a turn when companies began launching sound bars, which cost less to make and didn't require users to run cables all over their homes. Fast-forward to today, and you can get a solid sound bar with a wireless subwoofer for between $200 and $300. And then there's the AmazonBasics 2.1 Channel Bluetooth Sound Bar with Built-In Subwoofer, a 4-star rated home audio solution that costs less than $100. The nifty design builds the sub right into the sound bar itself, delivering great sound, a compact design, and the easiest possible installation. Here are a few more details from the product page:
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Amazon's New Echo Look Makes Alexa the Fashion Police Posted: 26 Apr 2017 01:39 PM PDT Alexa, do these pants make me look fat? Amazon's newest voice-powered device, the Echo Look, is a $199 Wi-Fi connected camera that you can use to check out how you look in your favorite outfits. When you say "Alexa, take a picture" or "Alexa, take a video," the Echo Look will snap a shot of you, and then upload it to the Echo Look app, where you can review what you're wearing and what you've worn in the past. |
8 Popular Part-Time Jobs for Retirees Posted: 25 Apr 2017 10:01 AM PDT Many people continue to work after age 65, but they often prefer a part-time role. Some retirees work in low-wage jobs, likely because they need the money or appreciate some other aspect of the job, such as schedule flexibility. Here are the eight most commonly held jobs among people age 65 and older, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. |
NFL prospect denies rape report made to police; no charges Posted: 25 Apr 2017 03:00 PM PDT |
Voices from overseas: People from around the world consider Trump's first 100 days Posted: 25 Apr 2017 06:23 AM PDT It was the most stunning political victory of the 21st century, one that brought shocked concern in many parts of the world and cheers in others. One uncontroversial certainty was that it would cause reverberations around the globe. Donald Trump campaigned on an "America First" platform, but has found himself as president drawn into thorny geopolitical complexities aplenty in the first 100 days of his administration. |
Sudan accuses South Sudan president of meeting rebels Posted: 24 Apr 2017 11:55 PM PDT Sudan on Monday warned South Sudan to cease its support of rebel groups at war with Khartoum, accusing its president of meeting with rebels last week in a rare public statement from Khartoum's intelligence agency. Sudan regularly accuses its neighbour of backing insurgents in the Darfur, Blue Nile and South Kordofan regions that run along its southern border. South Sudan split away from Sudan in 2011 after decades of civil war fuelled by ethnic divides and disputes over oil. |
Foreign extremists killed in Philippine clash: military Posted: 25 Apr 2017 06:04 AM PDT The Philippine military said Tuesday it had killed almost 40 militants loyal to the Islamic State group, including three Indonesians and a Malaysian, in a major land and air assault in the south. The foreigners were part of more than 160 fighters of the Maute group of militants who came under attack last weekend in Mindanao island, said national military chief General Eduardo Ano. "We inflicted about 37 enemy killed, 14 have been identified and 23 still unidentified, with three Indonesians and one Malaysian," he told reporters in Manila. |
'Bachelor' Held Behind Bars: Reality TV Star Charged in Fatal Hit and Run Posted: 25 Apr 2017 01:08 PM PDT |
This Mom's Viral Facebook Post Explains Why She Doesn't Teach Her Son to Share Posted: 26 Apr 2017 10:43 AM PDT |
Two accessories that make Amazon’s Echo Dot so much better Posted: 25 Apr 2017 05:20 AM PDT If you own an Amazon Echo Dot, you know quite well that it's the best way to interact with Alexa (and if you don't have an Echo Dot, definitely grab one now while 3-packs are on sale at their lowest price of 2017 so far). But the Echo Dot isn't perfect, of course, and that's where third-party accessories come into play. We'd like to bring two accessories in particular to your attention in this post, because they both make Amazon's Echo Dot so much better. The first is the Fremo Evo, a great little attachment that transforms your stationary Echo Dot into a portable Alexa speaker. The second is the LANMU Wall Mount, which fixes your Dot to the wall when you're not on the go, clearing space and keeping your Echo Dot out of the way. Fremo Evo
LANMU Wall Mount
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Judge Rules Against Apple’s Policy On Refurbished iPad Replacements Posted: 25 Apr 2017 09:00 AM PDT |
Tesla Model S Loses Top Ratings Spot Posted: 26 Apr 2017 03:00 AM PDT |
Arizona man convicted of killing best friend, woman, 4 kids Posted: 26 Apr 2017 02:18 AM PDT |
House Freedom Caucus announces support for new Republican healthcare bill to replace Obamacare Posted: 26 Apr 2017 09:58 AM PDT The House Freedom Caucus has announced it supports the new Republican health care reform bill that aims to replace Obamacare. The news marks a potentially bright contrast from the dramatic collapse in healthcare negotiations that occurred last month and appeared to put President Donald Trump's promise to repeal and replace Obamacare — which is officially named the Affordable Care Act — in jeopardy. Mr Trump had vowed to revisit the healthcare negotiations following that collapse but observers have noted that cobbling together a healthcare repeal plan that pleases both the hard line conservatives in the Freedom Caucus and more moderate Republicans would be difficult. |
Bloomberg on the roles of Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner in the Trump White House Posted: 25 Apr 2017 01:11 PM PDT |
Senate race ahead for suspended Alabama chief justice Moore Posted: 26 Apr 2017 02:59 PM PDT |
1,000 shot in Chicago so far this year Posted: 25 Apr 2017 02:59 PM PDT Chicago hit a grim milestone Tuesday, with more than a thousand people shot in the Midwestern US city since the beginning of the year. According to the Chicago Tribune newspaper 1,008 people have been shot in the city -- at least 182 fatally -- since the beginning of January, a pace roughly unchanged since the same period last year. The Chicago Police Department (CPD) offered conflicting data for the first four months of 2017, saying 172 people were killed and 954 shot -- a nine percent decline compared to the same period last year. |
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