Qatar Cargo Boeing 777 makes dangerously low pass over Texas runway – safety concerns raised
Video from the private Horseshoe Bay Resort Jet Center airport in Texas shows a Qatar Cargo Boeing 777-200F making an unusually low and fast pass over the runway. The footage has sparked debate about whether the maneuver complied with aviation safety standards and regulations. No official aviation authority has yet commented on the incident.
The Charlotte Hornets are trading star guard LaMelo Ball and Josh Green to the Minnesota Timberwolves, ESPN's Shams Charania reports. In return, Charlotte receives Naz Reid and a package of draft picks. The deal marks a major roster shake-up for both franchises.
Actor Wilmer Valderrama is expanding his WV Entertainment company with the launch of WV Social House, a new social media marketing firm. The company will create campaigns and content strategies for clients, partnering with iHeartMedia, Paramount, CBS, Live Nation and Coachella, among others. WV Social House will also handle talent social media management.
B-Rated Intl. has acquired worldwide rights to "Robert Richardson: The White Devil," a feature documentary about three-time Oscar-winning cinematographer Robert Richardson. Richardson is known for his close collaborations with Quentin Tarantino, Martin Scorsese and Oliver Stone. The trailer has debuted exclusively via Variety.
A father of three who was seized by ICE at a FIFA match last summer at MetLife Stadium — the venue for the 2026 World Cup final — is warning immigrants of the dangers of attending World Cup games in the US. The man was subsequently deported and shared his story anonymously with France 24 for safety reasons. His account highlights growing fears among immigrant communities ahead of the tournament.
Apple has raised prices on some MacBook and iPad models, citing a sharp and rapid rise in chip costs. The company stated it has "never seen a component price increase this much, this quickly." The hikes will affect customers purchasing new Apple devices, though the article does not specify exact new price points.
Donna Ockenden's report into maternity services at Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust has exposed horrifying levels of neglect. Cases include a woman told to labour at home for six days before receiving surgery, a student doctor performing an emergency hysterectomy and accidentally removing the patient's bladder, and a baby's remains being disposed of as clinical waste. Many babies died as a result of poor care.
The Ockenden report tells a terrible story of neglect. It’s a story that I – and far too many women I know – recogniseThe findings of Donna Ockenden’s report on maternity services at Nottingham University hospitals NHS trust (NUH) are horrifying. Such is the scale of suffering on the part of mothers, babies and their loved ones that it is almost beyond contemplation. Harrowing details – a room filled with the smell of infection after a woman who was told to labour at home for six days was finally granted surgery; a student doctor being allowed to perform an emergency hysterectomy on a woman, and accidentally removing her bladder; a baby’s remains being disposed of as clinical waste – haunt you long after you finish reading. And then there are all those babies, who should now be exuberant, lovely children, who died because of poor care and neglect.The victims and survivors, who campaigned long and hard for this review, don’t have the luxury of absorbing this information at their own pace, as I had to on Wednesday. They have lived with the brutal reality of it for many long years as they have fought for justice and accountability. These “mad grieving parents” – Sarah Hawkins’ description of how they were made to feel after the death of their daughter Harriet – did not give up in their quest for answers, and though they have been vindicated, I imagine there is a bitter aftertaste. Shamefully, nearly half of the senior members of staff at NUH refused to speak to Ockenden’s review.Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett is a Guardian columnist Continue reading...
The article recommends five perfumes evoking the atmosphere of a Tuscan holiday. Among them is Dolce & Gabbana Light Blue, featuring notes of Granny Smith apple, Sicilian lemon, jasmine and white rose on a base of cedar and musk. The selection is united by fresh, citrusy profiles and lasting wear.
China's Lineshine () supercomputer was crowned the world's most powerful at the International Supercomputer Conference in Hamburg, beating the previous record holder, the US-built El Capitan. Remarkably, Lineshine relies solely on CPU power — 13.7 million ARMv9 cores across 45,360 CPUs in 90 racks — with no GPUs or APUs involved. It was designed by chief architect Lu Yutong, with 304 cores per socket split across two chiplets.
The International Supercomputer Conference in Hamburg was the perfect platform for Lineshine (or Língshèng 灵晟) to, well, shine, as it received the crown of the world’s most powerful computer ever built.It smashed the previous TOP500 record held by El Capitan, the US supercomputer built in 2024 by HPE for the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL). Unlike the latter, Lineshine uses CPU power only rather than APU or GPUs, a remarkable feat given the prevalence of these technologies. Only another supercomputer in the top 10, the Arm-powered Fugaku supercomputer, falls in that category.Details shared by Lu Yutong, the chief designer of Lineshine show that it is powered by more than 13.7 million ARMv9 cores spread over 90 racks and 45,360 CPUs. Yes, you’ve got it right, there are 304 cores per socket split in two chiplets, and eight NUMA domains each with 38 cores and 4GB HBM memory. There’s apparently eight CPU slots left empty per rack.Each socket can access 256GB of DDR5 memory, which means that the entire system has 128TB off-package RAM and 16TB HBM. The entire supercomputer has 11.6PB of traditional DDR5 memory and almost 1.5PB of HBM.Compared to El Capitan pure HBM3 approach, Lineshine opted for a tiered memory pool similar to traditional computers (using RAM and SSD). The system is connected to 200PB of direct storage as well.Breathtaking performanceAltogether, Lineshine reached 2.198 exaflops, 21% faster than the 1.809 exaflop figure reached by El Capitan. However numbers don’t tell the whole story; China’s new top dog consumes far more power than El Capitan, making it far less efficient. It only reached 52 Gigaflops/Watt compared to 60.95 Gigaflops for El Capitan and 73.28 for Kairos, the greenest supercomputer in operation.What is more interesting is the fact that each core, even running at 1.5GHz, reached about 200 Gigaflops of FP64. Significantly more than any supercomputing CPU Core (e.g. AMD Zen 4 or Nvidia Grace) which ironically underlines Chinese weakness when it comes to GPU, i.e they went the CPU way because they didn’t have any option than to go brute-force.And that’s despite the barrage of launches by Huawei over the past few years with the Ascend 910D, the Ascend 910C and the Ascend 920.Lineshine used its own version of Nvidia’s Nvlink interconnect called LinQi, one that can scale in excess of 100,000 nodes or more than 60 million cores, 4x the current core count. So there’s plenty of room to grow should Lineshine want to keep its rank.It is not the first time that China sits atop the TOP500 leaderboard. The last time it achieved it was with the Sunway TaihuLight supercomputer back in 2017. And while nabbing the top spot on this leaderboard gets the winner bragging rights, it is only really useful for HPC (high performance computing) applications like CFD, earthquake simulation, materials, energy, drug design, neuroscience and scientific AI, and others.Hyperscalers like Google or Microsoft can muster even more powerful compute power, by at least an order of magnitude, if needed but that is not accounted for by TOP500 for various reasons.
The phrase "mad as a hatter" has its roots not in Lewis Carroll's fictional character, but in the real occupational hazard faced by hat-makers in the 18th and 19th centuries. Hatters used mercury nitrate to process felt, leading to chronic mercury poisoning with neurological symptoms including tremors, mood swings, and hallucinations. The toxic metal was directly responsible for the bizarre behaviour the expression describes.
South Korea coach Hong Myung-Bo left captain Son Heung-Min out of his starting XI for the crucial Group A match against South Africa — the first time since 2014 that Son did not start a World Cup game. The bold decision put South Korea's tournament progression in serious jeopardy. The gamble drew widespread criticism and disbelief.
A new report shows luxury goods sales are forecast to grow just 1–4% this year, while spending on luxury experiences is set to rise 3–7%. Wealthy consumers are increasingly prioritising travel and unique experiences over physical goods. A growing trend dubbed "inheritourism" — travel connected to wealth inheritance — is also gaining traction among the affluent.
The German government has cancelled the F126 frigate construction programme, valued at €18 billion and considered one of the largest naval rearmament projects in German history. The decision is a major blow to Rheinmetall, which was involved in the project, and the defence giant's market value dropped sharply following the announcement. The move is surprising given the ongoing European debate about boosting defence spending.
An indictment has been filed at the Warsaw District Court against Emil S., singer Dorota "Doda" Rabczewska and two other women. Emil S. faces 198 charges including money laundering and fraud against investors. Rabczewska is accused of helping her ex-husband evade repayment of creditors. Doda commented on the case via social media without elaborating on the substance of the charges.
Security firm Zscaler has uncovered a malicious Microsoft Edge extension called "Edgecution," spread via fake Outlook update sites linked in Microsoft Teams phishing messages. Once installed, the extension uses ZIP archives with a Python runtime to escape the browser sandbox, creating a backdoor capable of PowerShell and shell command execution. The campaign is linked to Initial Access Brokers tied to the Payout Kings ransomware group.
Zscaler uncovered “Edgecution,” a malicious Edge extension deployed via fake Outlook update sites shared in Teams phishingAttack uses ZIP archives with Python runtime to escape browser sandbox, creating a backdoor capable of shell/PowerShell execution and system data theftBelieved linked to Initial Access Brokers tied to ransomware group Payout Kings, showing evolving sophistication in access‑for‑sale operationsIf you are using the Edge browser be careful - there is a malicious campaign going round that uses the browser to deploy a backdoor via an extension.According to security researchers Zscaler, scammers are reaching out to their victims via Microsoft Teams, pretending to be IT support. They claim the user needs to install an Outlook update, or a spam filter, and direct the victims to a fake “Outlook Updates Management Console” website. There, the users are instructed to run one of the three provided processes, all of which download a ZIP archive that, when executed, creates a scheduled task. This task starts the Edge browser in headless mode (invisible to the user) and installs an extension officially called “Edge Monitoring Agent”. Zscaler, on the other hand, calls it “Edgecution”.Creating a Native Messaging manifestThe ZIP archive also contains an embedded Python runtime and a Python-based backdoor. The runtime creates a Native Messaging manifest - a file that tells the browser how to communicate with the backdoor. That’s the way the threat actors managed to escape the browser’s sandbox and run the backdoor on the compromised computer itself. That backdoor can do multiple things, from executing shell commands, to running PowerShell and arbitrary Python code. It can also write files on the host, enumerate running processes, and gather system information. Zscaler believes this is the work of an Initial Access Broker (IAB), a malicious group whose only job is to obtain access to a victim’s infrastructure and then sell it - or share it with a partnering group. This particular IAB, the researchers believe, is connected to a ransomware operation called Payout Kings. “The Edgecution browser extension illustrates the evolving sophistication of initial access brokers operating in the ransomware landscape,” Zscaler warns. “The reliance on a malicious browser extension to relay commands to a Python-based native host demonstrates a creative approach to evade traditional endpoint detection.”A full list of Indicators of Compromise (IoC) can be found on this link.Via BleepingComputer
Experts stress that obesity is a chronic disease, and that at a BMI of 30, only one in 124 women can return to a healthy weight through diet and exercise alone. GLP-1 medications are not a shortcut but a legitimate treatment component, comparable to insulin in diabetes management.
The European Space Agency (ESA) has stressed that governments play a crucial role as guarantors of steady contracts and orders for the space sector. Without consistent public institutional support, the industry cannot sustain long-term development, ESA argues. The article provides no specific programme details or figures.
An H&M dress made from a blend of 70% viscose and 30% linen, featuring a lemon print, has been named a top summer holiday pick. Inspired by the aesthetic of Italy's Amalfi Coast, the dress combines a romantic silhouette with breathable fabric suitable for multiple seasons. The writer highlights it as her personal number-one vacation piece for summer.
Researchers from Mosegaard Museum have discovered a vast Viking textile production complex spanning 100,000 square metres. The site contained 82 semi-sunken workshop buildings (grubehuse) and a single residential structure, suggesting it was overseen by one person. The complex was divided into distinct production zones, making it a unique, specialised industrial hub unlike any previously known Viking settlement.
The Polish Motor Union (PZM) announced new dates for several speedway events on Thursday. Among the changes is a rescheduling of the final of the Youth Polish Club Pairs Championship, which will be held in Krosno.
For weeks, thousands of Albanians have been taking to the streets in protests that have drawn global attention. Demonstrators say they are fighting for democracy against Prime Minister Edi Rama's government. Rama has dismissed the movement as part of a hybrid war waged against Albania, deepening the political standoff.
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