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HSBC down: App and website offline amid Black Friday sales
HSBC down: App and website offline amid Black Friday sales
HSBC’s app and mobile banking website are down on one of the biggest shopping days of the year. The outage came on the morning of Black Friday, when most large retailers offer significant sales – and customers are even more likely to be checking their balance. Instead, the app showed an error message indicating that service was unavailable. The bank said it was urgently working to fix the issue, which appeared to bring problems across its services. “We understand some customers are having trouble accessing banking services as usual right now,” HSBC said in a statement. “We’re investigating this as a matter of urgency and will share an update as soon as possible.” HSBC offers a status page but it appears to have not been updated. It showed that all services were operating normally – despite the company’s statement otherwise. Those who bank with First Direct may also be affected, since it is a part of HSBC. Read More Users of iPhones can now check bank balance from Wallet app Nasa has received a signal from 10 million miles away Bitcoin mining rate hits all-time high amid record-breaking prediction for 2024
2023-11-24 17:47
Snag a refurbished MacBook Air for $248
Snag a refurbished MacBook Air for $248
TL;DR: As of August 6, you can get a refurbished MacBook Air for only $247.99
2023-08-06 17:50
How to Automate Your Life With Apple's Shortcuts App
How to Automate Your Life With Apple's Shortcuts App
You probably spend a lot of time on your iPhone, iPad, or Mac running one
2023-06-03 02:16
Ninja's surprise CS: GO case opening at Nadeshot's wedding leaves Internet baffled: 'That's sad'
Ninja's surprise CS: GO case opening at Nadeshot's wedding leaves Internet baffled: 'That's sad'
Why did Ninja's picture from Nadeshot's wedding went viral? Know more
2023-07-22 17:49
Replace Your Smartphone With This Smart Pocket Watch
Replace Your Smartphone With This Smart Pocket Watch
Runcible bills itself as the "anti-smartphone."
2023-09-10 21:45
Is Madison Beer dating FaZe Kaysan? Singer addresses rumors on Kai Cenat stream
Is Madison Beer dating FaZe Kaysan? Singer addresses rumors on Kai Cenat stream
During a recent live stream with Twitch star Kai Cenat, Madison Beer was confronted with rumors about her alleged relationship with FaZe Kaysan
2023-06-20 13:46
Emmie Sperandeo: 3 unknown facts about TikTok influencer who fractured her skull in horse riding accident
Emmie Sperandeo: 3 unknown facts about TikTok influencer who fractured her skull in horse riding accident
Other than horseriding, Emmie Sperandeo has a lot of experise in agriculture too
2023-05-27 19:29
Google launches SynthID, an AI image watermark that's invisible to the naked eye
Google launches SynthID, an AI image watermark that's invisible to the naked eye
The problem with AI-created images is that, well, AI is creating images. That means a
2023-08-30 01:18
Target Circle Week is getting a huge head start on Amazon's Prime Big Deal Days this October
Target Circle Week is getting a huge head start on Amazon's Prime Big Deal Days this October
Target couldn't wait more than a day to one-up Amazon's announcement of the official dates
2023-09-21 02:15
It’s Early Days for the AI PC Growth Story
It’s Early Days for the AI PC Growth Story
Readers weigh in on artificial intelligence driving PC growth, Apple’s services revenue, wisdom from Dan Fuss, and concerns about private equity
2023-11-11 07:57
Amazon, Meta, Microsoft, and TomTom join forces to take on Google and Apple Maps
Amazon, Meta, Microsoft, and TomTom join forces to take on Google and Apple Maps
Amazon, Meta, Microsoft, and TomTom have jointly released an open map dataset aimed at providing
2023-07-27 13:23
Scientists make key discovery about mysterious origins of Egypt’s Great Sphinx
Scientists make key discovery about mysterious origins of Egypt’s Great Sphinx
The feats achieved by the Ancient Egyptians have long flummoxed even the most renowned experts. For example, how on earth did they build the Great Pyramid of Giza? It’s taken centuries for scientists and archaeologists to come up with an answer, and even that’s not set in stone. But now, researchers believe they’ve finally worked out how the Great Sphinx was made more than 4,500 years ago. Sure, there’s a pretty broad consensus about how the face of the giant limestone statue was created – it was most likely hand-carved by stone masons. But the imposing, multi-layered body had continued to evade explanation. However, researchers at New York University, have finally concluded that the body came about. And it wasn’t all thanks to the masonry skills of local workers. They believe that the shape was sculpted by Mother Nature herself, in the form wind. “Our findings offer a possible ‘origin story’ for how Sphinx-like formations can come about from erosion,” Leif Ristroph, senior author of the study, said in a statement. “Our laboratory experiments showed that surprisingly Sphinx-like shapes can, in fact, come from materials being eroded by fast flows.” For their study, the team took harder rock encased in mounds of soft clay to mimic the terrain along the Nile River in northeastern Egypt. They then washed over these formations with a fast-flowing stream of water to replicate the wind and, in the end, the clay assumed a Sphinx-like shape. The resulting form consisted of a lion’s “head,” “neck,” “paws” laid out in front and an arched “back". “There are, in fact, yardangs (rock features formed by air erosion) in existence today that look like seated or lying animals, lending support to our conclusions,” Ristroph pointed out. Still, we’re sure Ristroph would be the first to admit that he and his colleagues weren’t the first to come up with the aeolian erosion theory. In 1981, geologist Farouk El-Baz suggested that the iconic Sphinx was originally a flat-topped shape that was worn down by wind over time. Furthermore, El-Baz believed that the builders of Ancient Egypt would have known of these natural processes, and so carefully selected the shapes of their most iconic structures to withstand them. "Today, the pyramids of Giza exist in perfect harmony with their windy environment," the scientist said back in 2001. "Had the ancients built their monuments in the shape of a cube, a rectangle, or even a stadium, they would have been erased by the ravages of wind erosion long ago." Nevertheless, the New York University team were the first to show exactly how this phenomenon could have occurred, and their findings have broader implications. "The work may also be useful to geologists as it reveals factors that affect rock formations—namely, that they are not homogeneous or uniform in composition,” Ristroph said. "The unexpected shapes come from how the flows are diverted around the harder or less-erodible parts." Sign up for our free Indy100 weekly newsletter Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings
2023-11-01 20:25