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Save $100 on the new 15-inch MacBook Air on Amazon
Save $100 on the new 15-inch MacBook Air on Amazon
Save $100: As of June 16, the latest model MacBook Air (15.3-inch) is on sale
2023-06-16 23:15
US South blanketed with oppressive heat going into holiday weekend
US South blanketed with oppressive heat going into holiday weekend
A dangerous heat wave threatened to bring record-breaking temperatures to parts of the U.S. South on Friday, with
2023-06-16 22:25
Millions of Americans' personal data exposed in global hack
Millions of Americans' personal data exposed in global hack
Millions of people in Louisiana and Oregon have had their data compromised in the sprawling cyberattack that has also hit the US federal government, state agencies said late Thursday.
2023-06-16 22:23
How to Put Safari's Search Bar Back on Top in iOS 16
How to Put Safari's Search Bar Back on Top in iOS 16
Have you been stewing because Safari’s address bar seems to have disappeared from your new
2023-06-16 22:23
Cassette Beasts Review
Cassette Beasts Review
Pokemon didn't invent the monster-catching role-playing game, but it's the biggest name in the genre.
2023-06-16 22:21
Adobe Gains After Raising Forecasts on AI Features Roll-Out
Adobe Gains After Raising Forecasts on AI Features Roll-Out
Adobe Inc. shares gained after the company raised its full-year revenue and profit outlooks on optimism that generative
2023-06-16 22:16
Sierra Space Awarded Space Act Agreement with NASA
Sierra Space Awarded Space Act Agreement with NASA
LOUISVILLE, Colo.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jun 16, 2023--
2023-06-16 22:16
Reddit down: Site hit by more outages as fight over its future escalates
Reddit down: Site hit by more outages as fight over its future escalates
Reddit was hit by yet another outage, as the site’s troubles continue. The forum has been hit by protests and outrage in recent days, in response to a new policy that would see the site charge for access to its data. Reddit said that it was unfair that developers were given free access to its API, which allow them to show posts in third-party apps. But developers said that Reddit’s new pricing was too expensive to be sustainable, and many of the biggest of those apps have now announced they will be permanently shutting down. Those announcements have led to a widespread protest on Reddit, where moderators announced they would be taking their forums “dark” in an attempt to force a change by the site’s leadership. Administrators switched those forums to private and hid posts, meaning that they were effectively taken offline. That protest ran from 12 June to 14 June. But many of those administrators have suggested that recent actions by Reddit’s management, and the lack of change on the issue of pricing, will lead them to carry on the protest indefinitely. Amid those issues, Reddit went briefly offline for some users on Thursday evening. The company said that it was “investigating an issue that is causing load failures across web and mobile clients”. Around an hour and a half later, the company said the incident was resolved. But it was the second such technical issue the company has experienced as the protest has continued. Earlier this week, users saw another problem that meant they were unable to get to posts. Reddit spokespeople later confirmed that the problem had been a result of the protests. The large number of forums being taken on and offline had caused issues for the site’s infrastructure, they said, meaning that it was briefly taken offline. It has led to an unusual number of problems at Reddit. Between 19 March and 14 May, the site experienced no issues, according to its tracking website – but the last five days have seen two significant problems at Reddit. Nonetheless, the company still says it is experiencing 99.94 per cent uptime. Steve Huffman, Reddit’s chief executive, has urged Reddit’s staff to continue working on the site and suggested that the protest will eventually pass. Read More Reddit just went ‘dark’, and the site is in chaos Reddit is in chaos – and it’s CEO has finally responded Reddit’s blackout protest is set to continue indefinitely
2023-06-16 22:15
Write This Down: 15 Things You Didn't Realize Apple's Notes App Could Do
Write This Down: 15 Things You Didn't Realize Apple's Notes App Could Do
The Notes app built into Apple devices has long offered people a quick and convenient
2023-06-16 22:15
Price war: Amazon excludes rival Temu from competitive price checks
Price war: Amazon excludes rival Temu from competitive price checks
By Arriana McLymore NEW YORK Amazon is excluding its new competitor Temu from its price searching algorithm that
2023-06-16 21:59
Kai Cenat blasts CJ SO COOL for calling him 'fake': 'What's wrong with Black community?'
Kai Cenat blasts CJ SO COOL for calling him 'fake': 'What's wrong with Black community?'
Kai Cenat clarified that he only goes up to people he knows well and he didn't know CJ personally or anyone in his crew
2023-06-16 21:57
Study of oldest footprint ever may change the entire history of humanity
Study of oldest footprint ever may change the entire history of humanity
It’s not often that a single scientific discovery manages to change the way we think about the entire history of humanity. An ancient footprint has been newly uncovered, and it turns out that humans were walking around 30,000 years earlier than we previously thought. Two-legged homo sapiens were living in South Africa, it’s been proven, following the discovery of a 153,000 year old track. It was found in the Garden Route National Park near the coastal town of Knysna on the Cape South Coast. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter The footmarks outdate the oldest previous discoveries, with the previous oldest found in nearby areas dated at 124,000 years old. The discoveries were made possible thanks to the optically-stimulated luminescence dating method, which analyses how long it’s been since a grain of sand has been exposed to sunlight. Researchers Charles Helm of Nelson Mandela University and the University of Leicester's Andrew Carr wrote in the Conversation: "In 2023, the situation is very different. It appears that people were not looking hard enough or were not looking in the right places. "Today, the African tally for dated hominin ichnosites (a term that includes both tracks and other traces) older than 50,000 years stands at 14. "Given that relatively few skeletal hominin remains have been found on the Cape coast, the traces left by our human ancestors as they moved about ancient landscapes are a useful way to complement and enhance our understanding of ancient hominins in Africa." The scientists involved believe that the area could be home to many illuminating discoveries given the makeup of the soil. They wrote: "We suspect that further hominin ichnosites are waiting to be discovered on the Cape South Coast and elsewhere on the coast. "The search also needs to be extended to older deposits in the region, ranging in age from 400,000 years to more than 2 million years. "A decade from now, we expect the list of ancient hominin ichnosites to be a lot longer than it is at present – and that scientists will be able to learn a great deal more about our ancient ancestors and the landscapes they occupied." 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.
2023-06-16 21:26
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