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Feb 07 2026TECHNOLOGY

Portable Power That Keeps You Warm When the Grid Fails

When winter hits and the power goes out, a small device can become your biggest ally. A new portable station offers 2, 000 watts of steady power and a quick burst up to 3, 000 watts. It has ten outlets so you can plug in phones, laptops, routers, medical gear and even a kettle. The unit starts up in

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Feb 06 2026FINANCE

Credit Card Rates Near 30%: What It Means for Your Wallet

A rate of almost thirty percent on a credit card is more than just high—it can trap you in a long‑term debt cycle. Those numbers, once rare, now appear on many statements because issuers have raised risk prices across the board. Even a modest 2. 5 percent monthly interest adds up quickly, especially

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Feb 06 2026FINANCE

Soybean Futures: A New Look at Prices and Global Moves

The soybean market, which serves food, feed, and energy needs worldwide, is now moving in a fresh direction as economic signals change. Key influences come from weather in big growing areas, currency shifts, trade rules, and oil prices. A stronger U. S. dollar can hurt exports, while higher oil c

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Feb 06 2026POLITICS

Police Search Homes in Probe of Former Ambassador’s Ties to Epstein

British police carried out searches at two homes linked to Peter Mandelson, a former ambassador who is under scrutiny for alleged misconduct in public office. The investigations stem from new evidence that shows close connections between Mandelson and the late U. S. financier Jeffrey Epstein. The U

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Feb 06 2026BUSINESS

Toyota Faces Profit Hit and Leadership Shake‑Up

Toyota announced that its quarterly earnings fell 43 percent, a sharp drop that reflects the pressure from higher material costs and U. S. tariffs on imported parts. The company also revealed that its long‑time finance chief, Kenta Kon, will step into the CEO and president roles in April. Kon

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Feb 06 2026HEALTH

Big Pharmacy Deals: Who Controls Your Prescriptions?

Pharmacy benefit managers, or PBMs, are the middlemen that decide which medicines people get at their local drugstore. In many states, just a handful of PBMs own the majority of prescription business. This means they have a lot of power over drug prices and what doctors can prescribe. The situation

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Feb 06 2026HEALTH

Cervical Spine Surgery Trends in Older Adults

Recent years have seen a shift toward keeping the neck moving when treating spine problems. Instead of fusing bone segments together, doctors can now replace a damaged disc with an artificial one that still allows motion. This technique is called cervical disk arthroplasty, or CDA for short. The ne

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Feb 06 2026BUSINESS

Tariffs Take a Toll on Valentine’s Day Sales

Valentine’s Day usually brings a spike in sales for small shops that sell flowers, chocolates and cards. Yet many owners are feeling the pinch as February 14 approaches because of new import duties that were announced earlier this year. Three small‑business owners shared how the changing tariffs

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Feb 06 2026TECHNOLOGY

Parents Get a New Kid‑Friendly Phone That Lets Them Keep an Eye on Screen Time

AT&T has introduced a new phone aimed at children but designed mainly to give parents more control over their kids’ digital habits. The device, called the amiGO Jr. Phone, was unveiled on Friday along with a matching smartwatch. The company says it will help families manage how children use smartpho

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Feb 06 2026FINANCE

Bitcoin’s Drop Hits Treasury Firms Hard

Yesterday, Bitcoin fell from around $70, 000 into the mid‑$60, 000s in a sharp move that is more than a single‑day blip. The slide was driven by big outflows from ETFs and gave risk assets a quick, broad hit. Liquidity has once again shown it can be thin, so investors had to act fast. Because

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