URI

May 11 2026HEALTH

Why people wait too long to get help for bed sores

Many patients ignore pressure injuries, better known as bed sores, until they become serious. A small study asked 18 adults or their carers why they delayed seeing a doctor. The interviews revealed four key factors: whether the person understood the injury, how much support they had at home, if they

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May 10 2026CRIME

Crypto Crime Surge: Europe Leads the Attack Wave

Recent data shows that violent thefts targeting cryptocurrency owners have climbed sharply, with losses topping $101 million in the first four months of 2026. A security firm that tracks these incidents reports that only 34 attacks have been recorded worldwide, yet the damage has nearly doubled comp

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May 10 2026POLITICS

How Ohio’s Job Losses Show the Cost of Relying on China

Back in the 1970s, China was struggling to feed its people. Factories were rare, and most citizens survived on government-assigned housing with little income. Life expectancy was low—just 59 years—and the average person earned barely $130 a year. Meanwhile, the U. S. was booming. The average America

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May 10 2026TECHNOLOGY

AI threats to banks: How fast can hackers move now?

Cybercrooks with AI help don’t need years of coding skill anymore. A new AI model can scan systems, find weak spots, and break in almost instantly. The problem isn’t that attacks are smarter—it’s that they happen so quickly, defenses can’t keep up. When a breach can be set in motion before lunch and

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May 10 2026TECHNOLOGY

Melbourne businesses bet big on managed IT in 2026

Melbourne’s business scene in 2026 is all about speed and survival. Companies in shops, banks, hospitals, and building sites are racing to keep up with tech that changes every week. Old-school IT help that only fixes problems after they break isn’t cutting it anymore. Instead, many are hiring outsid

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May 10 2026POLITICS

UK Sends Warship to Middle East as Tensions Near Strait of Hormuz

The UK is moving its HMS Dragon destroyer to the Middle East, joining forces with France after months of rising tensions near the Strait of Hormuz. The ship was already in the Eastern Mediterranean since March, helping Cyprus after regional conflicts flared up. This shift shows Britain’s attempt to

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May 09 2026CRYPTO

Bitcoin as a Digital Power Tool for the Military

The U. S. Indo‑Pacific Command recently ran a Bitcoin node, sparking talk about the cryptocurrency’s role in national defense. A senior commander highlighted Bitcoin as a “valuable computer science tool” that could help project power across the globe. The comment came after Iran asked for Bitcoin to

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May 09 2026BUSINESS

What happens when a prison healthcare firm can't pay its bills?

A company that provides medical services to prisons recently filed for bankruptcy in Florida. YesCare, as it’s called, owes more money than it has on hand—between $100 million and $500 million in debts against only $50 million to $100 million in assets. This legal move, known as Chapter 11, pauses l

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May 08 2026FINANCE

Hidden Costs of Hand‑Made Finance Work

Many firms see technical debt as a growth side effect, but few notice the hidden operational debt that creeps into finance. Early on, teams patch together spreadsheet hacks and informal approvals to keep the books moving. When transaction numbers grow and new reporting rules appear, those patches tu

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May 08 2026BUSINESS

Fast food chain stumbles after sales dip and stock drop

A popular burger spot recently saw its share prices fall hard after reporting weaker-than-expected earnings. Bad weather, rising beef costs, and fewer visitors to its main city all played a role in the decline. The chain usually makes more money during colder months, but this year, chilly rain and s

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