This week, leading experts set the Doomsday Clock, a stark symbol of scientific worries about humanity’s, well, doom. Wars, ...
The BBC's Ione Wells looks at the Ecuadorian government's response to the incident, which occurred during a time of ...
As ICE raids separate families and protests continue, Globe reporter Joe Friesen describes what he saw on the ground in ...
The Swing Refinery doesn't have bars or food ... but that's fine for the clientele it's looking to reach.
Fireship on MSN
The JavaScript ecosystem didn’t see this coming
Anthropic’s move into the JavaScript ecosystem surprised almost everyone. Buying a popular runtime isn’t just a tooling ...
Atomic scientists set their “Doomsday Clock” on Tuesday closer than ever to midnight, citing aggressive behaviour by nuclear powers Russia, China and the United States, fraying nuclear arms control, ...
The clock moved to 85 seconds to midnight, the closest it has come to catastrophe since its debut 80 years ago.
The "Doomsday Clock" representing how near humanity is to catastrophe on Tuesday moved closer than ever to midnight as concerns grow on nuclear weapons, climate change and disinformation.
When the clock was created in 1947, the world’s threats were the growing threat of nuclear weapons following World War II.
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