ART OLED TV

Jun 09 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Why TV News is Struggling to Stay Relevant Today

TV news used to be the main source of information for most people. But those days are fading fast. Networks like CBS have watched their audiences shrink over recent years. Even skilled anchors can’t always escape the fallout. Scott Pelley, a longtime TV journalist, faced this reality twice, first in

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Jun 06 2026TECHNOLOGY

AI is here—but do people really trust it?

Artificial intelligence is changing how people work, study, and interact every day. Some experts call it the biggest shift since the Industrial Revolution, and big tech companies are pouring money into AI tools. Yet most Americans aren’t rushing to embrace it. In fact, they’re five times more likely

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Jun 05 2026LIFESTYLE

A Life Full of Family, Fishing and Football

Arthur J. Miller, known as Butch to those close to him, died on Monday, June 1, 2026 at the age of eighty‑eight. He lived in Ashford and was surrounded by his loved ones during his final moments, a fitting reflection of the devotion he showed to family throughout his life. Born on November 3, 193

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Jun 02 2026ENTERTAINMENT

When music clashes with politics on the road

Artists sometimes turn into lightning rods for opinions that fans didn’t sign up to hear. During one stop of Kid Cudi’s Rebel Rangers Tour in Dallas, singer M. I. A. decided to share her political views with the crowd. She mentioned endorsing Donald Trump in 2024 and called herself a Republican vote

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Jun 02 2026EDUCATION

Skin signs that tell more than meets the eye

TV dramas often show doctors missing obvious clues. In one episode, a patient’s rash appears days before fever and confusion set in. The team focuses on the confusion and forgets to check the skin. Only when the detective work catches up does someone notice the tiny purple spots—late clues to a dead

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May 24 2026TECHNOLOGY

How long do OLED phone screens really last?

OLED screens now last far longer than they used to. Early panels barely made it past 4 years of non-stop use. Today’s OLED phones are built for around 11 years if you never turn the screen off. That sounds impressive, but real-world use is never non-stop. Your phone spends time in your pocket, in be

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May 22 2026ART

Money, Not Meaning: What Happens When Art Becomes a Bid

Art auctions today feel more like high‑stakes poker games than cultural events. The focus shifts from seeing and feeling a piece to watching the price climb, as if value is created by the money itself. In this way, masterpieces are turned into trophies for the wealthy, and their true purpose—expan

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May 21 2026TECHNOLOGY

Future‑Friendly Tooth Repairs

Artificial intelligence is changing how dentists make removable partial dentures. Instead of relying solely on manual measurements, new software can now sketch and tweak designs automatically. The latest tools come from big tech companies that also build chatbots. These programs can read a

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May 18 2026TECHNOLOGY

AI Safety Talks: Banks and Governments Get the Inside Story

Artificial‑intelligence firms are stepping up to explain how their new tools could threaten global finance. Anthropic, the maker of Claude Mythos Preview, has agreed to meet with top finance ministries and central banks. The meetings aim to warn about cyber weaknesses that the AI model may reveal.

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Apr 30 2026SPORTS

The Gambling Trap in College Sports

Art Schlichter spent decades in the spotlight, but not for his football skills. Instead, his name kept popping up tied to scandals, fraud, and legal trouble. The reason? A gambling habit that started in his teens and ruined his career. He was once a top college quarterback, even leading Ohio State’s

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