Yahoo! News: Brazil
Yahoo! News: Brazil |
- Khizr Khan joins immigration lawyers at Dulles Airport
- Third Jewish cemetery damaged in surge of US anti-Semitic acts
- Appeals court hands oil companies victory in coastal lawsuit
- Trump to students at Florida Catholic school: ‘We’re going to make you famous’
- Philippines' Duterte will pay price for drugs killings, detained senator says
- Elephant All-Nighters? Giant Beasts Sleep Only 2 Hours
- Undocumented Father Snatched By ICE While Dropping Off Daughter At School
- Italy migrant rescues hit new high as Libya exit rises
- Photos reveal how polluted the U.S. was before EPA was founded
- Before his arrest in threats to Jewish groups, suspect fumed at racism
- The Latest: 2nd man arrested in Georgia missing teacher case
- Arkansas To Execute 8 Men In 10 Days
- Bali gears up for Saudi king's extravagant visit
- U.S. State Dept criticized over quiet release of human rights report
- The Devastating Way Woolly Mammoths Went Extinct
- Pence denies double standard as private email use uncovered
- Trump’s Promises to Defeat ISIS ‘Quickly’ Run Into Syria Buzzsaw
- Uber used secret tool to deceive authorities: NY Times
- Survivor of Kansas bar shooting released from hospital
- Avoid marijuana while pregnant urges new health advice
- An anniversary for the Missouri controversial compromise
- I met the company that’s reimagining multitouch
- AP FACT CHECK: McCaskill wrong about contacts with Russian
- Yelp Makes It Possible To Find Businesses With Gender Neutral Bathrooms
- Philippine defence chief visits US carrier in S. China Sea
- Why Keystone XL pipeline won't buy US steel, despite Trump's order
- China reports four more bird flu deaths, says spread of virus is slowing
- Woman who streamed Minnesota shooting charged in assault
- President Trump accuses former President Barack Obama of wiretapping Trump Tower
- Daisy the dog gets a second chance at motherhood after losing her puppies
- Firefighters Rescue 150-Pound Dog From Rooftop Twice in One Day After He Climbs Out Window
- Google exec hints that Google Assistant is coming to the iPhone
- Green River Alarms Small Spanish Town
- Iraq minister criticises UN efforts for Mosul displaced
- Rene Preval, who led Haiti amid catastrophe, dies at 74
- U.S. suspends fast processing of high-tech visa applications
- 2nd suspect arrested in case of missing Georgia teacher
- 5 Tax Troubles That Only Affect Retirees
- Moon missions continue Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk's rocket-measuring contest
- Body of Indianapolis Woman Found Near River After She Was Reported Missing
- Check out stunning 360-degree views of NYC straight from your browser
- Samsung Might Be Working On A VR Headset That Doesn't Need Smartphone Support
- China defence spending to rise 'around 7%': official
- Parents fearing deportation pick guardians for U.S. children
- Dire Measures to Combat Hunger in Venezuela
- Sinn Fein surge creates new Northern Ireland landscape
- Blake Lively’s Incredible Style Evolution
- 2016 Range Rover Td6 Diesel
Khizr Khan joins immigration lawyers at Dulles Airport Posted: 03 Mar 2017 09:28 AM PST Khizr Khan, the Gold Star father who famously condemned Donald Trump's proposed Muslim ban during the presidential campaign, paid his respects to a group of volunteers helping immigrants at Washington Dulles International Airport on Thursday. In an interview with Yahoo News, Mirriam Seddiq, an immigration attorney and Dulles Justice Coalition (DJC) volunteer, said Khan praised the volunteers over and over for embodying American values. |
Third Jewish cemetery damaged in surge of US anti-Semitic acts Posted: 03 Mar 2017 08:05 AM PST Vandals tumbled and defaced headstones at a Jewish cemetery in Rochester, New York, local officials confirmed Friday, the third such cemetery in the United States to suffer damage in a surge in apparent anti-Semitic acts. Meredith Dragon, chief executive of the Jewish Federation of Greater Rochester, said local police were not yet ready to determine whether the toppling of a dozen or more headstones in the Stone Road or Waad Hakolel Cemetery overnight Wednesday was an act of petty vandalism or a targeted hate crime. Nationally, a total of three cemeteries -- the others in St Louis, Missouri and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania -- have now seen large numbers of overturned and broken headstones, and hundreds of bomb threats have been phoned in to Jewish community centers and day schools. |
Appeals court hands oil companies victory in coastal lawsuit Posted: 03 Mar 2017 05:14 PM PST NEW ORLEANS (AP) — A federal appeals court Friday refused to revive a Louisiana levee board's lawsuit blaming dozens of oil and gas companies for damage to the state's fragile coast, a major victory for energy companies and their political supporters who cast the suit as an attack on a vital state industry. |
Trump to students at Florida Catholic school: ‘We’re going to make you famous’ Posted: 03 Mar 2017 02:01 PM PST |
Philippines' Duterte will pay price for drugs killings, detained senator says Posted: 03 Mar 2017 05:45 AM PST A senator and detained critic of Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte's war on drugs has warned he and his "blind followers" will pay for ignoring alleged extrajudicial killings, and should stop trying to fool the world their crackdown was above board. Leila de Lima, who last year led a Senate probe into alleged summary killings during Duterte's anti-drugs campaign, was arrested last week and has been remanded in police detention on drug charges. "In due time, your president and those who blindly enforce his illegal orders to kill, fabricate evidence and concoct lies will be held accountable," De Lima said in a handwritten note posted on her official Facebook page on Friday. |
Elephant All-Nighters? Giant Beasts Sleep Only 2 Hours Posted: 04 Mar 2017 06:20 AM PST A sample size of two is small, but if the two matriarchs are representative of their species, African elephants may be the shortest-sleeping mammals on Earth, the researchers said. "Elephants really don't sleep all that much, and this appears to be related to their large size," said study lead researcher Paul Manger, a professor in the School of Anatomical Sciences at the University of the Witwatersrand in South Africa. Previous studies have described elephant sleep, but many of those studies have flaws — either using captive elephants, which have different sleep schedules than wild elephants, or failing to consistently distinguish between rest and sleep, Manger said. |
Undocumented Father Snatched By ICE While Dropping Off Daughter At School Posted: 03 Mar 2017 10:18 AM PST |
Italy migrant rescues hit new high as Libya exit rises Posted: 03 Mar 2017 12:10 PM PST The number of migrants rescued at sea this year in operations run by Italy's coastguard topped 15,000 Friday after another 900 people were saved, including eight-month-old Syrian twins and five other babies. The latest operations confirm the pattern of a sharp upward spike in winter departures from troubled Libya. Migrant arrivals in Italy from its former colony are up by between 57 and 81 percent this year in comparison to the opening two months of 2015 and 2016, according to Italian interior ministry figures. |
Photos reveal how polluted the U.S. was before EPA was founded Posted: 03 Mar 2017 04:45 AM PST It can be argued that the current presidential administration appears to lack interest in the traditional mission of the Environmental Protection Agency. As a candidate, Donald Trump advocated wholesale repeal of environmental regulations and increased production of fossil fuels. As president, Trump picked Scott Pruitt to lead the EPA. |
Before his arrest in threats to Jewish groups, suspect fumed at racism Posted: 03 Mar 2017 03:42 PM PST By Jonathan Allen NEW YORK (Reuters) - About a year before being charged with sending fake bomb threats to Jewish organizations, Juan Thompson was fired from his job as a reporter at the Intercept news website in a downfall he would later say left him enraged. "The white New York liberal media makes me vomit with their arrogant, patronizing, bigotry," Thompson, 31, wrote in an essay he posted online on July 7. "I now have a Korean sense of Han — unadulterated rage against bigoted bullies, in this case the white liberal media," Thompson wrote. |
The Latest: 2nd man arrested in Georgia missing teacher case Posted: 03 Mar 2017 10:54 AM PST |
Arkansas To Execute 8 Men In 10 Days Posted: 04 Mar 2017 03:41 AM PST |
Bali gears up for Saudi king's extravagant visit Posted: 03 Mar 2017 12:26 AM PST Luxury hotels have been booked out and security forces deployed across Bali as the resort island geared up Friday for the arrival of Saudi King Salman on the latest leg of his extravagant Indonesian tour. Hundreds of top-end cars and SUVs are ready to transport the king, who arrives Saturday, and his vast entourage, while 396 tons of equipment have been flown in to the popular holiday island for the visit. After disembarking from his plane on a escalator, he was whisked in a convoy past cheering crowds and greeted at a presidential palace by a 21-gun salute and marching band. |
U.S. State Dept criticized over quiet release of human rights report Posted: 03 Mar 2017 03:34 PM PST By Yeganeh Torbati WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. State Department released its annual report on human rights around the world on Friday but the release was overshadowed by criticism that Secretary of State Rex Tillerson gave the report little of the traditional attention or fanfare. Tillerson declined to unveil the report in person, breaking with precedent established during both Democratic and Republican administrations. "The report speaks for itself," the official said in response to a question about why Tillerson did not unveil it. |
The Devastating Way Woolly Mammoths Went Extinct Posted: 03 Mar 2017 08:57 AM PST |
Pence denies double standard as private email use uncovered Posted: 03 Mar 2017 02:23 PM PST US Vice President Mike Pence denied charges of hypocrisy Friday, after it emerged he used a private email as governor of Indiana and while lambasting Hillary Clinton for doing the same. Pence said there was "no comparison whatsoever" between his use of an AOL account that was hacked and Clinton's private server. |
Trump’s Promises to Defeat ISIS ‘Quickly’ Run Into Syria Buzzsaw Posted: 03 Mar 2017 02:39 PM PST |
Uber used secret tool to deceive authorities: NY Times Posted: 03 Mar 2017 01:19 PM PST (Reuters) - Ride hailing company Uber Technologies Inc [UBER.UL] has for years used a secret tool to deceive the authorities in markets where its service faced resistance by law enforcement or was banned, the New York Times reported, citing sources. An Uber tool called Greyball used data collected from the Uber app and other methods to find and circumvent officials, the NYT reported on Friday. |
Survivor of Kansas bar shooting released from hospital Posted: 03 Mar 2017 09:16 AM PST |
Avoid marijuana while pregnant urges new health advice Posted: 03 Mar 2017 03:17 AM PST Despite the growing trend for marijuana use in the US, new advice warns women against smoking marijuana while pregnant, as the drug could affect the brain of the developing fetus. According to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Vital Statistics Reports, more than one in five US births now occur in states where marijuana is legal, following moves by many states to legalize medical use for adults, as well as decriminalize or legalize recreational use. |
An anniversary for the Missouri controversial compromise Posted: 03 Mar 2017 07:55 AM PST |
I met the company that’s reimagining multitouch Posted: 03 Mar 2017 11:20 AM PST We're all expecting the computing future envisioned by Minority Report to actually happen, and I'm mostly talking about the fantastic user interface from the movie, although a system that can predict crime might also come in handy. Tom Cruise's character uses a sophisticated computer that can interpret spatial gestures and provide instant responses. The entire room becomes a huge 3D screen where any type of gesture can be recognized. Well, we're not quite there yet. But a company called Qeexo is reinventing multitouch so that it feels more natural to the user, and I got to see it in action at Mobile World Congress. Touching a display or touchpad is now the norm when it comes to interacting with devices, whether they're smartphones, tablets, or PCs. And these devices can recognize a variety of touch patterns as long as you remember what those patterns are. But what if you could touch the screen in a more intuitive way, one that would come naturally without having to remember what a three-finger swipe to the left does? That's how Qeexo CEO Sang Won Lee explained the company's TouchTools software to me. Pretend you're picking up an eraser while touching the screen, and an eraser will magically appear. Move your hand around while maintaining contact with the screen and you'll erase everything the eraser touches. Want to write? Use your finger and a pen will appear on the screen. Want to change colors or settings for your pen? Just imagine you're rotating a dial that brings up extra menus, and one will appear. Swipe up with a hand just as you would with a real ruler on a piece of paper, and the ruler will appear and stay on the screen so that you can draw a straight line with your other hand. The software can simulate a camera as well, or a tape measure (that actually lets you measure on-screen elements), and they're all enabled by touch. These tools disappear from the screen the moment you lift your finger, freeing up as much space as possible for content. Here's a video demo of Qeexo's tech: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MWWzi5y6LC0 The best part about it is that the technology can be used on any device that accepts touch. It can be a big screen TV — that's the kind of device I tried it on — but also something smaller like a car's infotainment system. It can run Android, like the huge screen above, but it can also work on an iPad or anything else. Do we really need it? Imagine being able to control the volume in your car by reaching to the touchscreen and performing a motion that's similar to what you'd do with an actual physical volume knob. All that would happen without having to take your eyes off the road — and without having to remember a special gesture. Imagine using the tech in a classroom instead of the regular chalk and blackboard. It would eliminate wasted time, and you would not have to physically clean the blackboard or dive through menus looking for a certain feature on a conventional digital device. I was even shown an iOS version of the app that simulates mouse interaction, complete with buttons and scroll wheel that actually work. All that might be available in the future on a wide range of devices. The only thing Qeexo could tell me at the show is that it's aiming for a 2017 launch of a version of what I had seen on the show floor. Did I also mention that there's on-device machine learning involved in all of this? Yes, the future does look interesting, even if we're not quite where Minority Report was. Until we get to see TouchTools in commercial products, you can try a version of it on Huawei phones like the P10, or some of last year's handsets. The tech is called FingerSense, and uses many of the same solutions. The phone knows how you touch the screen, whether you use a finger or a knuckle, whether you draw a line or a letter, and it responds accordingly. It also works as soon as the display is turned on. Here's a demo of FingerSense in action: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SAb37ykYD1I |
AP FACT CHECK: McCaskill wrong about contacts with Russian Posted: 03 Mar 2017 12:34 AM PST WASHINGTON (AP) — Sen. Claire McCaskill was one of many Democrats taking umbrage at the revelation that Attorney General Jeff Sessions had twice met with the Russian ambassador to the U.S. during last year's presidential campaign, during a furor over that country's alleged interference in the election, and misled his colleagues about it during his confirmation hearing. |
Yelp Makes It Possible To Find Businesses With Gender Neutral Bathrooms Posted: 03 Mar 2017 09:31 AM PST |
Philippine defence chief visits US carrier in S. China Sea Posted: 04 Mar 2017 09:20 AM PST The Philippines' defence secretary on Saturday visited a US aircraft carrier patrolling the South China Sea, hailing the "strong relationship" with Washington despite President Rodrigo Duterte's pivot away from Manila's traditional ally. The US Navy said the USS Carl Vinson had been engaging in "routine operations in the South China Sea" since last month to assert freedom of navigation in the strategic waterway claimed by Beijing, Manila and a host of other Southeast Asian nations. |
Why Keystone XL pipeline won't buy US steel, despite Trump's order Posted: 04 Mar 2017 12:26 PM PST From the start of President Trump's election campaign, two aspects of his political identity – the businessman and the populist – have dueled for dominance. At least in the case of the Keystone XL pipeline, the businessman appears to be winning out. Speaking to reporters onboard Air Force One on Friday, White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders said that the pipeline, which has been in the works for a decade, will be exempt from an executive order Mr. Trump signed in January requiring new pipelines, repairs, or retrofits to use US steel "to the maximum extent possible." The justification for that decision: The pipeline is already under construction, and so is not covered by the executive order. |
China reports four more bird flu deaths, says spread of virus is slowing Posted: 03 Mar 2017 04:20 AM PST China reported four more deaths from H7N9 bird flu in the week to Thursday, raising the winter death toll to at least 112, Xinhua news agency said on Friday. The World Health Organization said on Wednesday the risk of sustained human-to-human transmission of H7N9 bird flu in China was low, but that a surge in human cases was worrying and required constant monitoring. There were 22 total new cases of bird flu during the week, Xinhua said, citing data from the National Health and Family Planning Commission. |
Woman who streamed Minnesota shooting charged in assault Posted: 03 Mar 2017 05:12 PM PST |
President Trump accuses former President Barack Obama of wiretapping Trump Tower Posted: 04 Mar 2017 08:01 AM PST |
Daisy the dog gets a second chance at motherhood after losing her puppies Posted: 03 Mar 2017 09:26 AM PST Meet Daisy Woodruff—this adorable, happy dog from Roseburg, Oregon: IT ME DAISY THE DOG HELLO HI! Image: Daisy Woodruff/Facebook According to Daisy's mom, Jessica Woodruff, Daisy unfortunately lost all seven of her puppies in a barn fire on Feb. 20. "We had a nice bed made for Daisy to have her pups inside but she found her own spot down at the barn. We noticed the fire and it was too late," Woodruff stated. They also lost four goats, one pig and the entire barn in the fire. SEE ALSO: Fun dad allows family dog to get a very unfortunate haircut After she lost her puppies, Daisy just wasn't the same. "Daisy wondered [ sic] the 80+ acres lost, sad and confused," she said. "As a mother, I couldn't fathom her loss." Image: Jacque Barnett In order to help Daisy recover from her loss, the search was on to get her foster puppies for Daisy to take care of. So, Woodruff's sister, Jacque Barnett, posted a note on a local Facebook page, searching for anyone who could help. Once the post was up, a local radio host saw it, and took the story to air. After hearing the story air on the radio, KPIC, a local news station, met with Woodruff and Daisy to cover their story on TV. And from there, an owner of eight orphaned puppies contacted Woodruff, and brought the pups over the next day. 8 happy little pups Image: Jacque Barnett Daisy nursing her new foster pups. Image: Jacque Barnett Ever since she's gotten a second chance at motherhood, Daisy got back to her old self again, much to the delight of her owner. "Daisy was in heaven!," Woodruff said. "It was so amazing to see the change. She had purpose again. She laid down to feed them, cleaned them, and even protects them." Image: Daisy woodruff/facebook Although the arrangement's temporary, Daisy will care for the pups until they are weaned. They'll then be returned home. "We aren't keeping any of the pups to live at the ranch but we are keeping the runt and gifting him to our Grandmother and Grandfather," said Woodruff. Daisy, fostering puppies. Image: jacque barnett "With out [ sic] a doubt, these foster pups have helped her," Woodruff said. "We have our Daisy dog back." Such pride. Image: Daisy woodruff/Facebook BONUS: Play fetch and crawl through tunnels in this dog-inspired bootcamp |
Firefighters Rescue 150-Pound Dog From Rooftop Twice in One Day After He Climbs Out Window Posted: 03 Mar 2017 12:53 PM PST |
Google exec hints that Google Assistant is coming to the iPhone Posted: 03 Mar 2017 09:47 AM PST When it comes to making money, Google has one mission and one mission alone: get its free apps and services in as many hands as possible. That's the very reason why Android was such a brilliant move on Google's part. By building a top-notch iOS rival and giving it away for free to any device maker that wants it, Google has created a scenario where well over a billion people access its apps and services constantly each day. The more they use their phones, the more data Google is able to collect. And the more data Google collects, the better it can target ads. As we discussed in an old article titled "The truth about Google and evil," Google does so much to help people, but it's an advertising company first and foremost. That brings us to Google Assistant, the company's answer Apple's Siri assistant and Amazon's Alexa. Google Assistant is already viewed by many as being more capable and more helpful than Siri, and just this week Google began rolling it out to Android phones running Android 6.0 or later. Google's mission to get its new AI assistant in as many hands as possible won't end with Android, of course, and now we have our strongest indication yet that Assistant is on its way to the iPhone. With the commotion at the annual Mobile World Congress trade show in Barcelona, Spain winding down, Dutch blog Geekster managed to catch up with Gummi Hafsteinsson, a Product Management Director at Google who is in charge of the Google Assistant project. Hafsteinsson had a lot to say about Google's hot new AI assistant, of course, but there was one portion of the interview that was of particular interest. When asked about the possibility of Google Assistant coming to iOS and Apple's iPhone, the exec gave a textbook non-answer that, for anyone who knows the industry, is pretty much an answer. "I do not think we have anything to announce at this point," Hafsteinsson said. "But I think the general philosophy is that we would like to have the Assistant available to as many people as possible." So there you have it, iPhone users. Google has nothing to announce at this point, but if you're a gambler, the smart money is on yes, Google Assistant will make its way to iOS in the future. |
Green River Alarms Small Spanish Town Posted: 03 Mar 2017 07:51 AM PST |
Iraq minister criticises UN efforts for Mosul displaced Posted: 04 Mar 2017 08:14 AM PST An Iraqi minister on Saturday sharply criticised UN efforts to aid civilians fleeing fighting in west Mosul, even as the United Nations insisted that providing such assistance was the "top priority". Tens of thousands of people have fled west Mosul since Iraqi forces launched an operation to retake it from the Islamic State jihadist group on February 19, pushing into the area from the south. "Unfortunately, there is a clear shortfall in the work of these (UN) organisations," said Jassem Mohammed al-Jaff, the minister of displacement and migration. |
Rene Preval, who led Haiti amid catastrophe, dies at 74 Posted: 03 Mar 2017 12:56 PM PST |
U.S. suspends fast processing of high-tech visa applications Posted: 04 Mar 2017 10:10 AM PST Foreigners aiming for temporary jobs at high-tech U.S. companies will undergo a longer visa approval process after the Trump administration announced it will temporarily suspend expedited applications for H-1B visas. The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) said on Friday that starting April 3 it will suspend "premium processing" for up to six months. Under this expedited procedure, applicants can be eligible for visa approvals within 15 days, instead of a regular review period that can last for up to a few months. |
2nd suspect arrested in case of missing Georgia teacher Posted: 03 Mar 2017 02:29 PM PST |
5 Tax Troubles That Only Affect Retirees Posted: 03 Mar 2017 07:23 AM PST Some retirees leave their money in a retirement account until they need it to pay for expenses. "Many people come in and tell me how they are only going to take out what they need," says Greg Hammer, president of Hammer Financial Group in Schererville, Indiana. Hammer argues retirees would be better served by taking money out of their retirement funds early, before they begin Social Security. |
Moon missions continue Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk's rocket-measuring contest Posted: 03 Mar 2017 11:16 AM PST Another day, another unhinged-sounding plan to fly to the moon announced by an eccentric billionaire. According to a report from the Washington Post, Blue Origin — the spaceflight company founded by Amazon.com's Jeff Bezos — is planning to set up an "Amazon-like" service to send cargo to the moon in the hopes that people will eventually settle there. The first "Blue Moon" mission — conducted with NASA's help — could launch as early as July 2020, according to the report. SEE ALSO: Jeff Bezos-backed rocket landed safely back on Earth after flying to space The Blue Origin news hits just days after SpaceX's Elon Musk announced that his spaceflight company plans to send two unnamed people on a trip around the moon at the end of next year. Is this yet another case of rocket-measuring by Musk and Bezos? Maybe. While these two plans are distinct and Blue Origin's was a case of a news organization breaking a story, rather than a specific announcement by a company, it is a good example of Bezos and Musk following one another around the solar system. Instead of NASA chasing the Soviets during the original space race, we now have billionaires trying to one-up each other, pushing them farther into space. The two billionaires are known for publicly sniping at each other over their respective space plans and accomplishments. In November 2015, for example, Blue Origin announced that its New Shepard rocket made its first trip to suborbital space and then landed back on Earth. This accomplishment came before SpaceX successfully landed its first orbital rocket back on the ground after launching a payload to space, but well after SpaceX launched its suborbital Grasshopper rocket and brought it back to the ground. Musk wasn't happy that Bezos was insinuating that this Blue Origin test flight was a "first" for reusability, and he made it known... publicly. On Twitter. @JeffBezos Not quite "rarest". SpaceX Grasshopper rocket did 6 suborbital flights 3 years ago & is still around. pic.twitter.com/6j9ERKCNZl — Elon Musk (@elonmusk) November 24, 2015 But credit for 1st reusable suborbital rocket goes to X-15 https://t.co/LSb0f8FLJdAnd Burt Rutan for commercialhttps://t.co/TGWlNjsyQz — Elon Musk (@elonmusk) November 24, 2015 Jeff maybe unaware SpaceX suborbital VTOL flight began 2013. Orbital water landing 2014. Orbital land landing next. https://t.co/S6WMRnEFY5 — Elon Musk (@elonmusk) November 24, 2015 More recently, however, the billionaires seem to have mellowed. "Great industries are usually built by not just one or two or three companies, but usually by dozens of companies. There can be many winners," Bezos said in April 2016, a sentiment he has echoed many times since. "From my point of view, the more the merrier. I want Virgin Galactic to succeed. I want SpaceX to succeed. I want United Launch Alliance to succeed. I want Arianespace to succeed, and of course I want Blue Origin to succeed. And I think they all can." Although Bezos's plan is not in direct competition with Musk's, the timing of the two announcements is still pretty funny. And oddly enough, it all may have something to do with President Donald Trump. A Trump connection Rumors were swirling in the space industry early this week that Trump would make some kind of announcement about human spaceflight during his speech to a joint session of Congress on Tuesday. However, that big space moment didn't come to pass. According to a report by Politico, Trump was expected to include more about his vision for America's future in space, but most of that got cut at the last minute. Instead, Trump's only reference to space in his hour-long speech was the line: "American footprints on distant worlds are not too big a dream." President Donald Trump, Elon Musk (center) and White House chief strategist Steve Bannon on Feb. 3, 2017. Image: AP/REX/Shutterstock It's not clear whether Trump's expected speech was the tipping point for SpaceX and Blue Origin, but either way, we know that Bezos and Musk have had time to speak with the new president. Bezos seemed to make nice with Trump at a tech summit held in December 2016. Musk was also in attendance at that meeting, sitting on the exact opposite side of the table from Bezos. Musk is also part of Trump's economic advisory council. Space industry insiders seem to be betting that the U.S. is now on a path back to the moon after former president Barack Obama scrapped the Bush-era plans to send crewed missions back to the lunar surface before heading on to Mars. For now, however, NASA doesn't yet have a new administrator and Trump has said little about the future of the space agency under his administration. However, congressional Republicans, who now hold the majority in both the House and Senate, are eager to see greater participation by private companies in space exploration. BONUS: Relive SpaceX's incredible daytime rocket landing with this video |
Body of Indianapolis Woman Found Near River After She Was Reported Missing Posted: 04 Mar 2017 01:11 PM PST |
Check out stunning 360-degree views of NYC straight from your browser Posted: 04 Mar 2017 12:15 PM PST We all spend plenty of time complaining about whatever wireless carrier we shell out money to every month to keep us connected while on the go, but rarely do wireless customers ever consider how difficult it actually is to provide coverage in any specific area. New York City is one particularly challenging location when it comes to mobile connectivity, and AT&T just launched a pretty cool web experience to explain just why that's the case and what they're doing to make the network stronger.
"In NYC, coverage, quality and capacity is the name of the game," AT&T explains in a blog post for its new Connecting New York City experience. "This means our engineers had to create a living, breathing network that is able to cover both full-time city-dwellers and commuters that depend on connectivity in the bridges, tunnels, and trains. And whether our customers live in Manhattan full time or commute in for work, the need to stay connected is something all New Yorkers have in common." The company filmed high resolution 360-degree video in several iconic locations around New York City including Central Park, 30 Rockefeller Center, and the Brooklyn Bridge. The video — which can be viewed via a VR headset or simply panned around right in your web browser — serves as a backdrop for AT&T to explain the changes and improvements they're making to their hardware around the city in order to improve connectivity. Some of the more interesting tidbits include the difficulty of improving wireless coverage in the heart of central park due to the ban on installing infrastructure — leading AT&T to build cell sites right into the existing light poles, which is apparently totally fine — and the task of improving underground signals by actually building cell sites below the surface of the city. |
Samsung Might Be Working On A VR Headset That Doesn't Need Smartphone Support Posted: 03 Mar 2017 04:04 AM PST |
China defence spending to rise 'around 7%': official Posted: 04 Mar 2017 08:35 AM PST China will raise defence spending "around seven percent" this year as it guards against "outside meddling" in its disputed regional territorial claims, a top official said Saturday, in an apparent reference to Washington. Just days after US President Donald Trump outlined plans to raise American military spending by around 10 percent, a spokeswoman for China's parliament told reporters that future Chinese expenditures will depend on US actions in the region. Fu did not specify what "meddling" she was referring to, but Beijing's increasingly assertive stance towards its claims in the South China Sea and East China Sea have stirred alarm in the region and prompted criticism from Washington. |
Parents fearing deportation pick guardians for U.S. children Posted: 03 Mar 2017 06:28 AM PST SAN FRANCISCO/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Parents who immigrated illegally to the United States and now fear deportation under the Trump administration are inundating immigration advocates with requests for help in securing care for their children in the event they are expelled from the country. The Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA) advocacy group has been receiving about 10 requests a day from parents who want to put in place temporary guardianships for their children, said spokesman Jorge-Mario Cabrera. At the request of a nonprofit organization, the National Lawyers Guild in Washington D.C. put out a call this week for volunteer attorneys to help immigrants fill out forms granting friends or relatives the right to make legal and financial decisions in their absence. |
Dire Measures to Combat Hunger in Venezuela Posted: 03 Mar 2017 08:57 AM PST |
Sinn Fein surge creates new Northern Ireland landscape Posted: 04 Mar 2017 04:37 AM PST |
Blake Lively’s Incredible Style Evolution Posted: 03 Mar 2017 06:28 PM PST |
Posted: 03 Mar 2017 11:35 AM PST |
You are subscribed to email updates from Yahoo News - Latest News & Headlines. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google Inc., 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
0 条评论:
发表评论
订阅 博文评论 [Atom]
<< 主页