INA

Apr 06 2026POLITICS

A Changing Game: What’s Really Happening in US-China Trade Battles

This year, the US and China are still stuck in a trade rivalry that began years ago. While leaders from both sides keep talking, their actions often send mixed signals. In March, both countries opened new investigations into each other’s trade practices. Plans for a high-level meeting between the US

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Apr 06 2026TECHNOLOGY

How Crypto Miners Are Powering the AI Revolution

A handful of former cryptocurrency mining companies have swapped digital coins for data center dominance. Once known for burning through electricity to mint virtual money, these firms now lease out massive computing power to tech giants racing to build artificial intelligence systems. Names like Cor

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Apr 05 2026SPORTS

Final Four Showdown: Who Will Beat the Big Dogs?

The 2026 NCAA Tournament is ending in Indianapolis, where four top teams will play for the championship. Two of them are powerhouses that have won many games this season, and two others have made strong runs too. No surprise teams are in the mix; each squad has believed it can win for months, and th

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Apr 05 2026CRYPTO

Crypto News Shake‑Ups: Trust Company, Quantum Risks and More

Coinbase has just landed a conditional license from the U. S. banking regulator to operate as a national trust company, but it will stay out of traditional banking services like taking customer deposits or running a bank. The move is meant to give the company a clear federal framework for its custod

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Apr 05 2026HEALTH

Healthcare coordination: why mixing systems could save money and lives

Healthcare works better when different parts talk to each other. That’s the simple idea behind coordination—getting hospitals, clinics, and social services to share information and resources instead of working in separate silos. But it’s not as easy as it sounds. The real challenge is balancing cost

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Apr 05 2026POLITICS

EU Countries Push for Fair Energy Profit Rules

Five European countries want energy giants to share extra profits from high fuel costs. Germany, Italy, Spain, Portugal and Austria signed a letter asking the EU to tax sudden gains made by energy firms. The push comes as rising oil prices from Middle East tensions squeeze household budgets. The mi

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Apr 05 2026FINANCE

Blockchain in Finance: A Double-Edged Sword?

The idea of turning stocks, bonds, and even cash into digital tokens on blockchain isn’t just a small upgrade—it’s a total makeover of how trading works. This shift could cut costs and speed things up, but experts warn it might also make financial crashes harder to control. The International Monetar

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Apr 05 2026CRIME

How Age Guesses Shape Court Decisions in Sweden

Swedish courts often rely on age estimates when deciding criminal cases. Out of 61 reviewed rulings, these guesses played a big role at three key cutoffs: 15, 18, and 21 years old. The judges looked at different kinds of proof—like medical tests, witness statements, and official documents—to figure

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Apr 05 2026LIFESTYLE

When One Job Can’t Pay for Two Careers

A long illness can change everything. One partner’s health crash often becomes another family’s financial crash too. This couple moved so one could study music, banking on a degree to lift their future. But joblessness sticks around—no matter how many applications get sent. The sick partner is now b

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Apr 05 2026TECHNOLOGY

China builds world’s fastest wind tunnel with explosive power

China opened a new kind of wind tunnel in 2023 that runs faster than any other on record. Called JF-22, it stretches 167 meters long with a four-meter wide test section. Instead of giant fans, it uses chemical explosions to whip air to Mach 30 speeds—nearly 23, 000 mph—faster than a space shuttle co

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