• Is this another DEI rollback in tech? Let’s discuss…

    Full story linked in comments below ✍🏾👇🏾

    #tech #politics #race #money #finance #business #venturecapital #dei
    Is this another DEI rollback in tech? Let’s discuss… Full story linked in comments below ✍🏾👇🏾 #tech #politics #race #money #finance #business #venturecapital #dei
    ·70 Vue ·0 Aperçu
  • President Trump has intensified his criticism of Biden’s alleged reliance on an autopen, pledging to invalidate any documents he says were “illegally” signed.

    Trump asserted that 92% of documents issued under Biden were signed this way and warned he may pursue perjury charges against the former president.

    -
    #history #news #photography #trending #politics
    President Trump has intensified his criticism of Biden’s alleged reliance on an autopen, pledging to invalidate any documents he says were “illegally” signed. Trump asserted that 92% of documents issued under Biden were signed this way and warned he may pursue perjury charges against the former president. - #history #news #photography #trending #politics
    ·104 Vue ·0 Aperçu
  • History does not move in a straight line.

    It is a chain of turning points that could easily have unfolded in a completely different direction.

    A pandemic that evolved at exactly the wrong moment and swept across continents.

    An inventor whose unfinished work might have shifted the balance of global power.

    A future president whose loss reshaped national politics and the course of international conflict.

    A royal family whose survival might have changed the future of Russia.

    An early form of the Internet that almost remained locked inside military research labs.

    A fire that destroyed an entire city and forced a new approach to urban design.

    A conqueror whose early death ended his plans before he could transform the map of the ancient world.

    Every one of these events rested on a single choice or a single accident or a single life.

    Change any one of them and the world we know today becomes something entirely different.

    These are not imagined scenarios.
    They are real moments when history stood on the edge of another timeline.

    Sources

    Smithsonian Magazine
    Library of Congress
    National Archives
    CDC 1918 Pandemic Records
    Wardenclyffe Tower Documents
    RFK Assassination Reports
    Romanov Execution Files
    Chicago Fire Historical Survey
    Internet Public Release Papers 1991
    Alexander the Great Biographical Records
    History does not move in a straight line. It is a chain of turning points that could easily have unfolded in a completely different direction. A pandemic that evolved at exactly the wrong moment and swept across continents. An inventor whose unfinished work might have shifted the balance of global power. A future president whose loss reshaped national politics and the course of international conflict. A royal family whose survival might have changed the future of Russia. An early form of the Internet that almost remained locked inside military research labs. A fire that destroyed an entire city and forced a new approach to urban design. A conqueror whose early death ended his plans before he could transform the map of the ancient world. Every one of these events rested on a single choice or a single accident or a single life. Change any one of them and the world we know today becomes something entirely different. These are not imagined scenarios. They are real moments when history stood on the edge of another timeline. Sources 📚 Smithsonian Magazine Library of Congress National Archives CDC 1918 Pandemic Records Wardenclyffe Tower Documents RFK Assassination Reports Romanov Execution Files Chicago Fire Historical Survey Internet Public Release Papers 1991 Alexander the Great Biographical Records
    ·207 Vue ·0 Aperçu
  • Ireland’s president has a habit of sharing the spotlight—and not with politicians. His Bernese Mountain Dog, Misneach, is often right at his heel during public events and while welcoming guests to Áras an Uachtaráin, offering a gentle reminder of what compassionate leadership looks like.

    Dogs have long been part of his story. Misneach (“courage”) still accompanies him everywhere, while Bród (“pride”), the beloved Bernese who happily greeted dignitaries for years, passed away in April 2023 but remains fondly remembered by the nation.

    Whether they’re wandering into live interviews or charming world leaders in the garden, these “first dogs” have become an endearing symbol of warmth and humanity at the heart of the Irish presidency.

    #wholesomenews #upliftingstories #ireland #dogs #love #family #politics
    Ireland’s president has a habit of sharing the spotlight—and not with politicians. His Bernese Mountain Dog, Misneach, is often right at his heel during public events and while welcoming guests to Áras an Uachtaráin, offering a gentle reminder of what compassionate leadership looks like. Dogs have long been part of his story. Misneach (“courage”) still accompanies him everywhere, while Bród (“pride”), the beloved Bernese who happily greeted dignitaries for years, passed away in April 2023 but remains fondly remembered by the nation. Whether they’re wandering into live interviews or charming world leaders in the garden, these “first dogs” have become an endearing symbol of warmth and humanity at the heart of the Irish presidency. #wholesomenews #upliftingstories #ireland #dogs #love #family #politics
    ·179 Vue ·0 Aperçu
  • NASA astronaut Ron Garan, who spent 178 days in space, says humanity is “living a lie” after seeing Earth’s fragility firsthand and experiencing the profound Overview Effect.

    From orbit, Garan realized how backwards our priorities are: we put the economy first and the planet last, even though our thin atmosphere is the only barrier protecting life. He emphasized that the true order of importance should be Planet → Society → Economy, since without a thriving Earth, neither people nor systems can survive.

    He described the “lie” as the illusion of separation, the false belief that we are divided by nations, politics, or identities. In reality, he says, we are one human family sharing one fragile home. His message is a plea for unity, awareness, and sustainability before it’s too late.

    Like this content? Follow us @FutureTech for more!
    NASA astronaut Ron Garan, who spent 178 days in space, says humanity is “living a lie” after seeing Earth’s fragility firsthand and experiencing the profound Overview Effect. From orbit, Garan realized how backwards our priorities are: we put the economy first and the planet last, even though our thin atmosphere is the only barrier protecting life. He emphasized that the true order of importance should be Planet → Society → Economy, since without a thriving Earth, neither people nor systems can survive. He described the “lie” as the illusion of separation, the false belief that we are divided by nations, politics, or identities. In reality, he says, we are one human family sharing one fragile home. His message is a plea for unity, awareness, and sustainability before it’s too late. Like this content? 👉 Follow us @FutureTech for more! 🔌
    ·181 Vue ·0 Aperçu
  • China has sent a crewed submersible beneath Arctic pack ice for the first time, marking a new phase in polar exploration and great-power competition. The dive, carried out by the Jiaolong on August 6 in the Chukchi Sea roughly 300 nautical miles northwest of Alaska, capped China’s largest Arctic mission to date and underscored its ambition to be a scientific and strategic player in the High North.⁠

    Four research vessels, led by the icebreaker Xuelong-2, spent the summer completing marine surveys across the Chukchi Plateau, Canada Basin, and central Arctic. The fleet returned to Shanghai on September 26, having executed coordinated “atmosphere-ice-ocean” observations and supported deep-sea operations designed to fill critical data gaps as sea ice thins and retreats.⁠

    Operating under ice is notoriously hard. Satellite links fade, radio is unreliable, and navigation becomes a puzzle without open-sky fixes. Ice floes can shift suddenly and temperatures punish machinery. Only a handful of nations have managed it, a lineage that includes the USS Nautilus crossing the North Pole in 1958 and subsequent Cold War dives by Soviet and British boats.⁠

    The scientific takeaways are starting to surface. Teams reported stark regional differences in seafloor life, from organism density to biodiversity and body size. Those measurements will refine maps of deep-sea habitats and help track how warming, acidification, and changing ice cover are reshaping Arctic ecosystems. The mission also advanced China’s polar toolset, pairing submersibles with ice-edge surveys to sharpen forecasting for hazards and shipping.⁠

    All of this unfolds amid mounting geopolitical interest. China calls the Arctic a “new strategic frontier,” the United States is upping patrols, and melting ice is opening routes and resources long out of reach. Science is the visible face, but strategy is never far below the surface.⁠

    #arctic #deepsea #china #oceanography #geopolitics #submersible #climate #polarresearch #technology
    China has sent a crewed submersible beneath Arctic pack ice for the first time, marking a new phase in polar exploration and great-power competition. The dive, carried out by the Jiaolong on August 6 in the Chukchi Sea roughly 300 nautical miles northwest of Alaska, capped China’s largest Arctic mission to date and underscored its ambition to be a scientific and strategic player in the High North.⁠ ⁠ Four research vessels, led by the icebreaker Xuelong-2, spent the summer completing marine surveys across the Chukchi Plateau, Canada Basin, and central Arctic. The fleet returned to Shanghai on September 26, having executed coordinated “atmosphere-ice-ocean” observations and supported deep-sea operations designed to fill critical data gaps as sea ice thins and retreats.⁠ ⁠ Operating under ice is notoriously hard. Satellite links fade, radio is unreliable, and navigation becomes a puzzle without open-sky fixes. Ice floes can shift suddenly and temperatures punish machinery. Only a handful of nations have managed it, a lineage that includes the USS Nautilus crossing the North Pole in 1958 and subsequent Cold War dives by Soviet and British boats.⁠ ⁠ The scientific takeaways are starting to surface. Teams reported stark regional differences in seafloor life, from organism density to biodiversity and body size. Those measurements will refine maps of deep-sea habitats and help track how warming, acidification, and changing ice cover are reshaping Arctic ecosystems. The mission also advanced China’s polar toolset, pairing submersibles with ice-edge surveys to sharpen forecasting for hazards and shipping.⁠ ⁠ All of this unfolds amid mounting geopolitical interest. China calls the Arctic a “new strategic frontier,” the United States is upping patrols, and melting ice is opening routes and resources long out of reach. Science is the visible face, but strategy is never far below the surface.⁠ ⁠ #arctic #deepsea #china #oceanography #geopolitics #submersible #climate #polarresearch #technology
    ·202 Vue ·0 Aperçu
  • Apple has removed an app called ICEBlock from the App Store after warnings from law enforcement. ICEBlock let people mark on a map where they saw immigration officers, and then shared those alerts with others nearby. Attorney General Pam Bondi said the app was dangerous because it put officers at risk, and asked Apple to take it down. Apple agreed, saying it wanted the App Store to remain safe and trusted.⁠

    The removal happened shortly after a shooting at an ICE building in Dallas, where a gunman fired from a rooftop and killed two detainees. Officials claimed the shooter used tracking apps like ICEBlock to target the facility. ICEBlock’s creator, Joshua Aaron, says this is false. He argues the app was designed to protect communities during immigration raids, not to endanger officers, and points out it was downloaded more than a million times. He says he will fight Apple’s decision.⁠

    Apple has made similar moves before. In 2019, it removed an app used by Hong Kong protesters to track police. In 2021, it removed a voting app tied to Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny. Last year in China, Apple pulled WhatsApp, Telegram, and other messaging apps after pressure from local authorities. These cases show Apple often bends to government requests, even when the apps are popular.⁠

    Experts warn that governments can pressure private companies into silencing apps without passing any laws. That means Apple’s App Store has become a powerful gatekeeper, deciding which tools people can or cannot use when safety and politics collide.⁠

    #apple #appstore #privacy #freespeech #immigration #lawenforcement #technology #policy
    Apple has removed an app called ICEBlock from the App Store after warnings from law enforcement. ICEBlock let people mark on a map where they saw immigration officers, and then shared those alerts with others nearby. Attorney General Pam Bondi said the app was dangerous because it put officers at risk, and asked Apple to take it down. Apple agreed, saying it wanted the App Store to remain safe and trusted.⁠ ⁠ The removal happened shortly after a shooting at an ICE building in Dallas, where a gunman fired from a rooftop and killed two detainees. Officials claimed the shooter used tracking apps like ICEBlock to target the facility. ICEBlock’s creator, Joshua Aaron, says this is false. He argues the app was designed to protect communities during immigration raids, not to endanger officers, and points out it was downloaded more than a million times. He says he will fight Apple’s decision.⁠ ⁠ Apple has made similar moves before. In 2019, it removed an app used by Hong Kong protesters to track police. In 2021, it removed a voting app tied to Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny. Last year in China, Apple pulled WhatsApp, Telegram, and other messaging apps after pressure from local authorities. These cases show Apple often bends to government requests, even when the apps are popular.⁠ ⁠ Experts warn that governments can pressure private companies into silencing apps without passing any laws. That means Apple’s App Store has become a powerful gatekeeper, deciding which tools people can or cannot use when safety and politics collide.⁠ ⁠ #apple #appstore #privacy #freespeech #immigration #lawenforcement #technology #policy
    ·235 Vue ·0 Aperçu
  • Russia is openly bragging about a cruise missile powered by a miniature nuclear reactor. The weapon, called Burevestnik and nicknamed “Skyfall” by NATO, was presented by Vladimir Putin as something no one else has: a low-flying missile with “unlimited range” that can dodge missile defenses. Russia’s top general, Valery Gerasimov, told Putin that in an October 21 test the missile stayed in the air for 15 hours and flew about 14,000 kilometers, roughly 8,700 miles, which he said is still not the limit.⁠

    If that flight happened the way Moscow describes it, it would mark one of the longest demonstrations of nuclear propulsion ever reported in a cruise missile. The idea dates back to the U.S. Project Pluto of the 1950s, which explored nuclear-powered ramjet weapons before being shut down in 1964 over safety, cost, and the rise of ICBMs. Those same concerns are still here. A reactor that heats incoming air for thrust also risks spraying radioactive exhaust, and past Russian tests have already ended in deadly accidents and localized radiation spikes.⁠

    Western defense analysts are openly skeptical. Independent verification of the 15-hour test has not been produced, and past Burevestnik launches have mostly failed or only partially worked. Critics say the missile is technically extreme, strategically awkward, and environmentally reckless.⁠

    The politics are immediate. Donald Trump responded by downplaying the threat, saying the U.S. has nuclear submarines near Russia and telling Putin to end the war in Ukraine instead of advertising new doomsday weapons.⁠

    #tech #military #defense #nuclear #russia #ukraine #security #aerospace
    Russia is openly bragging about a cruise missile powered by a miniature nuclear reactor. The weapon, called Burevestnik and nicknamed “Skyfall” by NATO, was presented by Vladimir Putin as something no one else has: a low-flying missile with “unlimited range” that can dodge missile defenses. Russia’s top general, Valery Gerasimov, told Putin that in an October 21 test the missile stayed in the air for 15 hours and flew about 14,000 kilometers, roughly 8,700 miles, which he said is still not the limit.⁠ ⁠ If that flight happened the way Moscow describes it, it would mark one of the longest demonstrations of nuclear propulsion ever reported in a cruise missile. The idea dates back to the U.S. Project Pluto of the 1950s, which explored nuclear-powered ramjet weapons before being shut down in 1964 over safety, cost, and the rise of ICBMs. Those same concerns are still here. A reactor that heats incoming air for thrust also risks spraying radioactive exhaust, and past Russian tests have already ended in deadly accidents and localized radiation spikes.⁠ ⁠ Western defense analysts are openly skeptical. Independent verification of the 15-hour test has not been produced, and past Burevestnik launches have mostly failed or only partially worked. Critics say the missile is technically extreme, strategically awkward, and environmentally reckless.⁠ ⁠ The politics are immediate. Donald Trump responded by downplaying the threat, saying the U.S. has nuclear submarines near Russia and telling Putin to end the war in Ukraine instead of advertising new doomsday weapons.⁠ ⁠ #tech #military #defense #nuclear #russia #ukraine #security #aerospace
    ·276 Vue ·0 Aperçu
  • President Trump announced that most Americans will receive “at least” $2,000 from the tariff revenue collected by the Trump administration.

    Trump’s statement, made on his Truth Social platform, comes after the White House defended his sweeping use of tariffs before the Supreme Court, where the justices appeared skeptical of the president’s broad use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act.

    While this proposal would likely need to be passed by Congress, Trump has not specified who would qualify for the dividend, although he said “everyone,” except “high-income people,” would be paid at least $2,000 in the form of a dividend.

    (The Hill)

    -
    #history #news #photography #explore #politics #trending
    President Trump announced that most Americans will receive “at least” $2,000 from the tariff revenue collected by the Trump administration. Trump’s statement, made on his Truth Social platform, comes after the White House defended his sweeping use of tariffs before the Supreme Court, where the justices appeared skeptical of the president’s broad use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. While this proposal would likely need to be passed by Congress, Trump has not specified who would qualify for the dividend, although he said “everyone,” except “high-income people,” would be paid at least $2,000 in the form of a dividend. (The Hill) - #history #news #photography #explore #politics #trending
    ·148 Vue ·0 Aperçu
  • At a leadership summit in Johannesburg, former U.S. President Barack Obama stated that “the world would be better off if more old men just got out of the way.” He argued that nearly 80% of global issues stem from aging leaders refusing to relinquish power, rather than making room for younger generations.

    His remarks sparked widespread discussion, particularly given the dominance of older leaders in politics across the U.S., Europe, and other regions. While Obama didn’t single out any individual, his comments struck a chord amid growing conversations about generational change and the need for fresh leadership on the global stage.

    What do y’all think

    -
    #history #politics #news #trending #photography
    At a leadership summit in Johannesburg, former U.S. President Barack Obama stated that “the world would be better off if more old men just got out of the way.” He argued that nearly 80% of global issues stem from aging leaders refusing to relinquish power, rather than making room for younger generations. His remarks sparked widespread discussion, particularly given the dominance of older leaders in politics across the U.S., Europe, and other regions. While Obama didn’t single out any individual, his comments struck a chord amid growing conversations about generational change and the need for fresh leadership on the global stage. What do y’all think⁉️ - #history #politics #news #trending #photography
    ·363 Vue ·0 Aperçu
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