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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
1 y

Airlines Explain Why You Rarely See Pilots With Beards
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Airlines Explain Why You Rarely See Pilots With Beards

As well as wondering why flight attendants never seem to drink hot drinks and why airplane windows have those tiny little holes in them, you may have wondered at some point why so few pilots have beards.While it's not a Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) policy, several big airlines do have strict policies about facial hair. American Airlines, for example, requires their pilots to be clean-shaven before reporting for duty."We do not allow pilots with facial hair to be on active duty," an American Airlines spokesperson explained to Thrillist. "It's actually safety driven. Safety is one of the biggest, most important things in our industry."American airlines goes as far as not allowing "jumpseaters" – off duty airline crew occupying spare collapsible seats in the aircraft – to have beards or goatees.  Some airlines do allow you to have some facial hair, although you are limited to a neatly trimmed goatee or mustache. Delta will permit sideburns as long as they don't reach down past the middle of the ear, while mustaches are allowed too if they don't reach past the corner of the mouth. It's not some weird fashion choice, but the result of a 1987 safety review on masks and facial hair. Following reports that beards could make oxygen masks less efficient, several studies showed that that was the case."Three popular TSO-approved crewmember oxygen masks equipped with mask-mounted regulators were tested to determine if a decrement in performance would occur as a result of the presence of facial hair," the report explains of one such study. "The data resulting from these tests indicated that decrement in performance does occur when facial hair is present along the sealing surface of crew oxygen masks. This decrement is proportional to the amount of facial hair present, the type mask worn, the suspension system associated with the mask, and the exercise level to which the individual is subjected."One of the studies found leakage between 16 and 67 percent for passengers sporting beards underneath their oxygen masks. This safety-concern is exacerbated by the physical activity of crew members, which raises their breathing rate and increases their risk of hypoxia.While all airlines permit passengers to have facial hair – it's incredibly rare that they would be asked to perform complex duties like flying the plane – reduced airflow caused by a big bushy beard could be a problem for them too in an emergency situation."The leakage of ambient air caused by beards does not permit an adequate percentage of oxygen to be presented to the lower portion of the respirator tract. The proper functioning of the continuous flow mask relies on having the greatest concentration of oxygen presented at the beginning of inspiration (taking a breath or inhaling) with dilution of oxygen permitted during the latter phase of inspiration. The concentration of oxygen and the inspiration phase during which it is inhaled are more critical factors than the total oxygen received," the report continues. "Bearded passengers might expect some deficit in oxygenation following a decompression that could lead to varying degrees of hypoxia (physiological conditions that result when the body does not receive enough oxygen). If the mask is properly donned and usual emergency descent procedures can be followed, the deficit in oxygenation might not be severe enough to be life-threatening, but could cause loss of consciousness."All “explainer” articles are confirmed by fact checkers to be correct at time of publishing. Text, images, and links may be edited, removed, or added to at a later date to keep information current. [H/T: Thrillist]
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1 y

Networks Present House Hearing as St. Merrick Garland vs. Republican Villains
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Networks Present House Hearing as St. Merrick Garland vs. Republican Villains

The four nightly broadcast news shows (ABC, CBS, NBC, PBS) on Tuesday presented Attorney General Merrick Garland’s House hearing as a brave moment where he proclaimed he would "not be intimidated" by House Republican demands.   The emphasis of every segment was a pitiable Garland attacked by the Republican bullies, the news seemed more and more like a teenage drama story, exempt from any attempt at nonpartisan journalism. The House Republicans called the hearing in hopes of obtaining audio and video from President Biden’s meeting with Special Counsel Robert Hur about his handling of classified documents and concerns over links between the Bidens and the Trump Trial from the week prior. Yet in covering the hearing the networks seemed to care more for following their script, leading to a collection of biased stories, like ABC and NBC echoing:  DAVID MUIR, ABC: We turn now to Capitol Hill, and to the combative hearing. (...) LESTER HOLT, NBC: And a combative House hearing, Attorney General Merrick Garland fought back against Republican attacks, including the false accusation the Justice Department was behind the Manhattan prosecution of former President Trump.  (...) GEOFF BENNETT, PBS: Attorney General Merrick Garland pushed back against Republican lawmakers today over what he called unprecedented attacks on the Justice Department. During an appearance before the House Judiciary Committee, Garland condemned what he called the conspiracy theory that his department played a part in Donald Trump's criminal hush money case in New York. Major aspects of the hearing were quickly summed up in a few words, leaving out the context which was very clearly missing. PIERRE THOMAS, ABC: And Garland, for the first time, blasting false allegations that the DOJ and Biden were behind the Manhattan District Attorney's prosecution and conviction of former President Trump on 34 felony counts. GARLAND: That conspiracy theory is an attack on the judicial process itself. In each story it is evident the picture which the media hoped to paint. Detailing the Attorney General as “soft,-spoken,”and “pushing back … against dangerous attacks on the Justice Department.”  Meanwhile the Republicans were painted with comparatively aggressive descriptions of “angry”, “refusing”, and accused of “attacks” against their sainted Garland.  What truly could be a truly interesting segment about issues which the Republican Officials are yet again swept under the rug for a dramatic, but incomplete story. Disappointing, though not surprising.   The transcript is below. Click "expand" to read: CBS EVENING NEWS CBS Evening News with Norah O’Donnell 06/04/24 6:36:56 p.m. 58 seconds [ON-SCREEN HEADLINE: Breaking News; Attorney General Garland: ‘I Will Not Be Intimidated’] JAMES BROWN: Attorney General Merrick Garland pushed back today against what he calls dangerous attacks on the Justice Department. Garland appeared before the House Judiciary Committee amid threats from Republicans to hold him in contempt of Congress. Garland accused Republicans of spreading false conspiracy theories suggesting the Justice Department was involved in former President Donald Trump's historic conviction last week by a New York jury. ATTORNEY GENERAL MERRICK GARLAND: These repeated attacks on the Justice Department are unprecedented, and they are unfounded. These attacks have not and they will not influence our decision-making. I will not be intimidated, and the Justice Department will not be intimidated. BROWN: Garland also shot down the baseless claim that federal law enforcement was cleared to use deadly force against Trump during their search for classified documents at Mar-a-Lago. CBS MORNINGS CBS Mornings 06/05/24 7:12:15 a.m. 1 minute and 57 seconds   [NEWS HEADLINE: Merrick Garland Testifies; AG Says Trump & Republicans Attacks on Judicial System Are Dangerous] VLADIMIR DUTHIERS: U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland was called to Capitol Hill yesterday to face Republican lawmakers who say the Department of Justice is targeting former President Trump. As Nicole Killion reports, Garland rejected those claims, calling them dangerous. ATTORNEY GENERAL MERRICK GARLAND: I will not be intimidated, and the Justice Department will not be intimidated. NIKOLE KILLION: In some of his most forceful comments to date, Attorney General Merrick Garland defended his department from false attacks. GARLAND: That is false. The allegation is not true. That’s a false characterization. KILLION: The attorney general said the DOJ had no involvement in the local prosecutions of former President Trump in Georgia or New York, where he was convicted last week. CONGRESSMAN MATT GAETZ (R-FL): Will the Department of Justice provide to the committee all documents, all correspondence between the department and Alvin Bragg’s office and Fani Willis’s office and Letitia James’ office? GARLAND: The offices you’re referring to are independent offices of state. GAETZ: I don’t need a history lesson. GARLAND: We do not control those offices. KILLION: Garland was also scrutinized over the classified document and January 6 probes of  Trump led by Special Counsel Jack Smith. CONGRESSMAN JIM JORDAN (R-OH): He was the best pick for the most high profile investigation ever? GARLAND: He was independent, he was nonpartisan. KILLION: Federal cases against Hunter Biden — GARLAND: I have never spoken to Hunter Biden in my life. KILLION: — and GOP lawmakers pressed him to turn over tapes of President Biden’s interview with Special Counsel Robert Hur. CONGRESSMAN ANDY BIGGS (R-AZ): You’ve been non-responsive, and that’s why we need the audio. KILLION: Democrats slammed the other side. CONGRESSWOMAN BECCA BALINT (D-VT): I do not partake in cannabis products, but after today’s hearing, I could understand why someone might want to actually pop a gummy. It is maddening. CONGRESSMAN ADAM SCHIFF (D-CA): They care more about this convicted felon than they do the country. KILLION: Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan told me the House could move forward with a full contempt vote against Garland as soon as next week, although the speaker says timing is still being worked out, Nate. NATE BURLESON: Nikole, thank you NBC NIGHTLY NEWS  NBC Nightly News with Lester Holt 6/4/2024 07:08:07 PM ET Run Time: 1:57   [NEWS HEADLINE: Breaking News; Garland: 'I Will Not Be Intimidated] LESTER HOLT: At a combative house hearing, Attorney General Merrick Garland fought back against Republican attacks, including the false accusation the Justice Department was behind the Manhattan prosecution of former President Trump. Here is Hallie Jackson. [Cuts to Video] [NEWS HEADLINE: A.G. Garland: ‘I Will Not Be Intimidated’] HALLIE JACKSON: A message both blunt and sharp tonight from the attorney general. MERRICK GARLAND: I will not be intimidated, and the Justice Department will not be intimidated. JACKSON: A full-throated defense from the typically soft-spoken AG, targeting Republican attacks on the Justice Department and slamming suggestions the DOJ had a hand in former President Trump's state felony conviction last week, as Mr. Trump falsely claimed. GARLAND: That conspiracy theory is an attack on the judicial process itself. JACKSON: But many Republicans insist the Biden DOJ's playing politics. CONGRESSMAN JIM JORDAN (R-OH): Many Americans believe there is now a double standard in our justice system. They believe that because there is. JACKSON: The House GOP looking to hold Merrick Garland in contempt of congress for defying a subpoena for the audio of the interview between President Biden and Special Counsel Robert Hur, who ultimately declined to prosecute the President over his handling of classified documents, suggesting a jury would be unlikely to convict a “well-meaning elderly man with a poor memory.” The interview transcript has already been released, but Republicans want more. CONGRESSMAN SCOTT FITZGERALD (R-WI): We haven't heard the tapes. We don't know if they match up. CONGRESSMAN KELLY ARMSTRONG (R-ND): If you have audio or video, that is better than a transcript. REPRESENTATIVE ANDY BIGGS (R-AZ): Substantively, the transcript may be accurate. But you know what? The audio would tell us so much more. JACKSON: But the White House asserted executive privilege over the recordings at the request of Garland, who today says he'd be concerned about a possible chilling effect if they were released. GARLAND: It could influence witnesses' answers if they thought the audio of their law enforcement interviews would be broadcast to Congress and the public. [Cuts to Live] JACKSON: And with the House Speaker rolling out a new three-part plan today to go after the justice department, the GOP fight is clearly not over yet. Lester HOLT: Hallie Jackson, thank you. ABC WORLD NEWS TONIGHT  ABC’s World News Tonight with David Muir 6/4/2024 06:40:25 PM ET Run Time: 1:50   [NEWS HEADLINE: Garland: "I Will Not Be Intimidated"] DAVID MUIR: We turn now to Capitol Hill, and to the combative hearing. Attorney General Merrick Garland defending the Justice Department from allegations of political bias, reminding lawmakers that the DOJ had no role in Donald Trump's conviction in New York state. Here's our chief justice correspondent Pierre Thomas. [Cuts to Video] [NEWS HEADLINE: Garland :"I will not be Intimidated" Atty. Gen. Condemns Conspiracy Theories About Trump Case ] PIERRE THOMAS: Tonight, the Attorney General firing back, rebuking Republican claims that the Department of Justice is being weaponized. MERRICK GARLAND: These repeated attacks on the Justice Department are unprecedented and they are unfounded. THOMAS: In an intense, more than five-hour hearing, Garland today defiant, even as he faces the threat of being held in contempt by House Republicans for refusing to release the audio of President Biden's interview with the special counsel over Biden's handling of classified documents. GARLAND: I will not be intimidated. And the Justice Department will not be intimidated. THOMAS: And Garland, for the first time, blasting false allegations that the DOJ and Biden were behind the Manhattan District Attorney's prosecution and conviction of former President Trump on 34 felony counts. GARLAND: That conspiracy theory is an attack on the judicial process itself. THOMAS: But Republicans accusing the DOJ of playing politics, clearly angry about the Manhattan jury's verdict. CONGRESSMAN JIM JORDAN (R-OH): Justice is no longer blind in America. HOUSE SPEAKER MIKE JOHNSON (R-LA): They're so desperate to stop him that they're willing to use the judicial system to do so. It is a new low. THOMAS: Democrats forcefully pushing back. CONGRESSMAN JERRY NADLER (D-NY): These Republicans don't care what's in the interest of the American people. They just care about getting their favorite felon back in the White House. [Cuts to Live] THOMAS: All these allegations of accusing the DOJ of playing politics come at a dangerous moment. He worries it could fuel a spike in threats of violence aimed at DOJ employees. David? MUIR: Pierre Thomas, live on the Hill tonight. Pierre, thank you.
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
1 y

The future ain't what it used to be
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The future ain't what it used to be

For longer than you think, Americans have been an anxious people. There are a number of reasons for that, but as Alexis de Tocqueville ably chronicled, a big one is our experience with what he called “democratic life.” Importantly, Tocqueville did not blame our miseries on democratic politics. Far from it, in fact — he emphasized that the only worldly cure for what ailed us was to be plunged into the messy, difficult details of shared local governance, the very epitome of political democracy as Americans have long known it. If we are to do better than that, we’ll have to take matters into our own hands, cognizant that all such matters depend ultimately, and intimately, on God.But democratic life — where the equality of conditions prevailed over the vast majority — led, he warned, to certain psychological and spiritual pressures that could often be overwhelming. The short span of 60 or so productive, mature years was not enough, he reflected, for people not born into riches and privileges to securely set themselves up for restful, confident, self-directed activity. Instead, scrambling for advantage in a social scrum defined by competition and conformity, Americans were always worried about tomorrow, when they might lose ground or face some fresh tumult, and when — even if somehow they managed to climb the slippery pole — they’d wake up one day having squandered their life on the rat race for the fleeting pleasures and opportunities of this world. Tocqueville made much of the need for “habits of the heart” to ameliorate (but never cure) the anxieties of democratic life. For him, that ultimately came from religion. Even what today might be called a “minimum viable” Christianity struck him as hugely better than nothing. But today we might be pressed to reconsider the viability of that approach in light of the evidence. People, not just anxious Americans, are stubbornly reluctant to put in the hard spiritual work of confronting God amid one’s own frailty and folly in the scary depths of one’s own heart. It’s tough even with nothing else on your plate. Add in the hustle and bustle and uncertainty of democratic life, and all the distractions we manufacture in our desperate quest for a new instant fix, and it can seem impossible, however willing the Lord might be to forgive.For that reason, Americans have long sought to leap out of their spiritual and social predicament by refocusing their social and personal attention away from the present. Some have preferred to do this by making the past their center of attention. American optimismBut the past ain’t all that past in the United States, certainly not in comparison with the Old World. Here, there just isn’t a distant golden age to seek to return to or restore. In the vague lands of imagination, perhaps, an indulgent nostalgia not really one’s own might bloom for some. For most, however, the best place to run to escape the responsibility and repentance demanded of us by actually living in the present — in God’s presence — is the future, and it is to the future that progressively more Americans, at least until very recently, have turned for relief by proxy. This, despite consistent disappointment at the hands of the ostensible future, conjured up in shimmering disincarnate form by legions of self-appointed — sometimes credentialed — “futurists.” Futurists today are pushing back hard against the future’s sadly inevitable PR problem. They have at their advantage a certain kernel of truth. It is perverse to want tomorrow to be worse than today and even sinful to despair of tomorrow. Falling down on our responsibilities today is guaranteed to bite us next week, if not sooner. The sins of the fathers really are visited on the sons down through the generations. The “Great Stagnation” many partisans of the future lament is not entirely a figment of the imagination. On the other hand, the blame is most often wrongly assigned. Where the futurists finger envy, guilt, laziness, stupidity, or any other number of shortcomings, the real culprit is a deep-seated understanding in the human heart that more — more stuff, more distractions, more idols, more machines, more tools, more drugs, more speed, more noise — is, in the spiritual sense that plagues us most, actually less, actually a deepening of the hole in which we find ourselves. Of course, that’s not to say we shouldn’t build better airplanes (instead of letting them drop from the sky) or more robust digital infrastructure (instead of letting the internet decay into spam). It’s simply to say that the biggest problem with futurism — the insurmountable problem — is the future itself. We can never really find refuge from the present in the future, because we can never really live there. As a result, futurism characteristically just turns out to mean distorting the present to make it seem like the future. This lie, this illusion, merely aggravates our anxiety, despite superficially numbing it. Stuck in this vicious circle, Macbeth’s impulse to keep going because it’s easier than trying to go back (that is, to change heart and repent) becomes society’s impulse as a whole. “I want to outrace the speed of pain for another day,” Marilyn Manson sang in the late ‘90s — a warning from a person explicitly inhabiting the role of an alien monster from the future. Few could take the croaks of the shock rocker at face value, but look at us now, dedicated as a society to trying to do exactly that.This is the bitter fruit of futurism, an idol of an imagined worldly perfection to which none of us can attain, and from which none of us can elicit mercy. It’s an all too poetic justice for a people led so far astray in the mid-20th century by another well-meaning but misleading cult, that of “living for today” and “being here now.” Those hippie mantras merely garlanded a culture of personal irresponsibility instead of pushing people where Tocqueville urged — into the necessities of shared life. But without a shared spiritual life, the everyday toil of maintaining the fleeting things of this world — ultimately, including all merely mortal things — is, once again, too much for us to bear. Tocqueville believed that governments in democratic times could only bring people back around to faith by requiring them to attend to their own affairs as best as they could instead of reducing them to childlike slaves. If we are to do better than that, we’ll have to take matters into our own hands, cognizant that all such matters depend ultimately, and intimately, on God. That’s a presentism we can believe in.
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1 y

Judge: Defendant who went viral over driving with suspended license never had license to begin with. Now he's arrested again.
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Judge: Defendant who went viral over driving with suspended license never had license to begin with. Now he's arrested again.

Corey Harris went viral last week after video came to light showing him driving a car during a May 15 Zoom hearing for his case of driving with a suspended license, which garnered Harris plenty of derision. During that hearing, Judge Cedric Simpson of Ann Arbor, Michigan, announced that Harris' bond was revoked and ordered him to turn himself in at the Washtenaw County jail by 6 p.m. that same day, or else he'd be held without bond, WJBK-TV reported. 'It should be something of a lesson for all of us. Handle your business. At the end of the day, handle your business.' Then it was widely reported earlier this week that another judge in 2022 ordered Harris' license suspension rescinded — but information about the rescinded suspension never got to the Michigan secretary of state, so the record was never changed. With that, Harris got plenty of sympathy. However, when Harris appeared Wednesday in front of Judge Simpson — this time in person — Simpson shared shocking new information. Speaking to Harris' new attorney, the judge said, "People are saying — and quite frankly your client has made the assertion — that ... this court was acting on some type of defective or faulty information. Which I will tell you, counsel, caused the court — given what the court did — to investigate what my ruling was." With that, Simpson stated that Harris actually "has never had a Michigan license, ever," nor has he had a valid driver's license in any other state, and by the end of the hearing Simpson had Harris arrested right then and there, WXYZ-TV reported. It turns out that court officials said information about Harris' rescinded license suspension never got to the Michigan secretary of state because Harris never paid his fees, WXYZ added. "There was no error by anybody," Simpson said, according to the station. "It was a failure on the part of Mr. Harris to do certain things." So how could Harris' license be suspended if he didn't have a license to begin with? WXYZ reported that in Michigan, individuals can have suspensions on their driving records without having valid driver's licenses. The station added that if such individuals are able to obtain driver's licenses, they still wouldn't have driving privileges until they cleared their suspensions. A spokesperson for the Michigan secretary of state confirmed to WXYZ — now that the judge made the information public — that Harris has never possessed a valid driver's license. While Harris told WXYZ during a Tuesday interview that he didn't recall if he ever had a valid driver's license, a Pittsfield Township prosecutor at Wednesday's hearing said Harris admitted that he didn't have a license to the officer involved in the October 2022 traffic stop that led to May 15's viral Zoom hearing. Judge Simpson by the end of Wednesday's court session issued a bench warrant for Harris' arrest — over a 2015 case of driving with a suspended license in Allen Park, WXYZ said. Harris' new defense attorney, Dionne Webster-Cox, told the station she was shocked: "It should be something of a lesson for all of us. Handle your business. At the end of the day, handle your business." This story has been updated.Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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National Review
National Review
1 y

Virginia to Abandon California’s ‘Misguided’ Electric-Vehicle Mandate by End of Year, Youngkin Says
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Virginia to Abandon California’s ‘Misguided’ Electric-Vehicle Mandate by End of Year, Youngkin Says

‘The idea that government should tell people what kind of car they can or can’t purchase is fundamentally wrong,’ Youngkin said.
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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
1 y

Andrew McCabe Whining About How Scared FBI Employees are of Trump Goes HILARIOUSLY Wrong (Watch)
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twitchy.com

Andrew McCabe Whining About How Scared FBI Employees are of Trump Goes HILARIOUSLY Wrong (Watch)

Andrew McCabe Whining About How Scared FBI Employees are of Trump Goes HILARIOUSLY Wrong (Watch)
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RedState Feed
RedState Feed
1 y

Biden's Awkward Moments of Confusion in Normandy
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Biden's Awkward Moments of Confusion in Normandy

Biden's Awkward Moments of Confusion in Normandy
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Trending Tech
Trending Tech
1 y

iOS 18 leak reveals major AI enhancements for Mail app
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bgr.com

iOS 18 leak reveals major AI enhancements for Mail app

Ahead of WWDC 2024, a new iOS 18 leak reveals Apple's big plans for the Mail app by adding major AI enhancements. People familiar with the matter told AppleInsider that pre-release versions of iOS 18 included search results within the Mail with Contacts information, locations, and locally stored documents. With that, iOS 18's Mail app would take advantage of Apple's on-device Ajax LLM for search results, which could bring "Smart Replies" to emails generated by Apple's AI software. This new Smart Replies feature will "streamline email communication and save knowledgeable users a significant amount of time," according to the report. AppleInsider also reveals that iOS 18 Mail will get enhancements for email categorization. By using on-device machine learning, it will analyze the text contents of a message to identify time-sensitive emails and classify email senders into pre-defined categories: Commerce News Other Promotions Social Transaction The publication says Apple could add these categories in the app's user interface, or maybe they'll just be used in the backend so Siri can identify different email types. Lastly, the personal assistant might be able to summarize emails and email threads in iOS 18 and macOS 15. As previously rumored, AI changes will also come to Spotlight and Siri. Bloomberg, for example, said that Apple is working on Spotlight search improvements. The current version lets you look for content on the iPhone, launch apps, and perform internet searches. Generative AI will give Spotlight new abilities on the iPhone. Apple would add large language models to Spotlight to answer more complex questions. The AI would also tie into apps, and it might let you launch specific app functions, according to Bloomberg. On Monday, BGR will bring all the latest information from WWDC 2024. Below, you can learn 12 announcements we expect from Apple during its developer's conference. Don't Miss: 12 Apple announcements to expect at WWDC 2024 The post iOS 18 leak reveals major AI enhancements for Mail app appeared first on BGR. Today's Top Deals Memorial Day deals: $20 Amazon credit, $329 iPad 10, $20 TOZO earbuds, Hydro Flask, Motorola foldables, more Today’s deals: $30 Thermacell mosquito repeller, $16 wireless fast charger, $140 eufy robot vacuum, more Memorial Day deals: $189 AirPods Pro, $43 camera drone, $179 Roomba, Crest 3D Whitestrips, Instant Pot, more Best deals: Tech, laptops, TVs, and more sales
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NEWSMAX Feed
NEWSMAX Feed
1 y

FDA: Target JN.1 Strain in Fall's Updated COVID Shot
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FDA: Target JN.1 Strain in Fall's Updated COVID Shot

Government advisers Wednesday said it's time to update the recipe for the COVID-19 vaccines Americans will receive in the fall - targeting a version of the ever-evolving coronavirus called JN.1. While COVID-19 cases currently are low, more surges are inevitable and...
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NEWSMAX Feed
1 y

Artificial Sweetener Linked to Heart Attack, Stroke
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Artificial Sweetener Linked to Heart Attack, Stroke

Higher amounts of the artificial sweetener xylitol might raise the risk of heart attack and stroke, a new study warns. Xylitol is a zero-calorie sugar alcohol commonly used in sugar-free candy, chewing gum, baked goods and toothpastes, researchers said. But high blood levels...
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