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Apr 06 2026SPORTS

A Kiwi Star with Pacific Roots

Charlisse Leger-Walker’s journey began in Hamilton, a city in New Zealand’s Waikato region, where she was born in 2001. At just 16, she made history by joining the Tall Ferns, the New Zealand women’s basketball team—becoming its youngest member ever. Her rise wasn’t sudden; she spent years sharpenin

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Apr 06 2026TECHNOLOGY

How Submarines Find Their Way Without GPS

On land, GPS helps cars and phones pinpoint their location in seconds. But underwater, these signals vanish almost instantly. Saltwater blocks satellite waves because seawater conducts electricity, absorbing the radio frequencies GPS relies on. Even advanced systems like GLONASS and BeiDou face the

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Apr 06 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Cassette tapes are back, but why would anyone choose them over streaming?

Back in the '80s and '90s, cassette tapes ruled the music scene. People loved them because they could record songs off the radio, make mixtapes for friends, or carry music anywhere. Fast forward to today, and something unexpected is happening—cassettes are making a surprising comeback. Sales have sk

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Apr 06 2026FINANCE

Tech Stocks Riding the AI Wave

Big money on Wall Street is betting on a handful of tech companies expected to benefit from the AI boom. UBS recently picked twelve stocks it thinks will outperform, focusing on firms tied to AI infrastructure, chips, and cloud services. These picks suggest the bank sees long-term growth in areas wh

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Apr 06 2026FINANCE

Ping An Healthcare Gets a Steady Boost from Analysts

Analysts at one firm aren’t backing down from their strong opinion on Ping An Healthcare and Technology. The company just got a second vote of confidence with a buy rating and a price target set at HK$23. 88. That’s higher than what most analysts think, which sits around HK$17. 63 on average. Ping

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Apr 06 2026BUSINESS

AI at Work: Helping or Endangering Your Career?

Many workers today feel caught in a tough spot with AI. They see it as both a tool and a threat. Around 30% of Americans worry their jobs could disappear because of AI, and some students even change their majors because of it. This fear isn’t surprising. Companies are spending huge amounts of money

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Apr 06 2026ENVIRONMENT

Turning wood scraps into a tool for cleaning dirty water

Recycling leftover eucalyptus wood into biochar turns a common trash problem into a water-cleaning hero. Scientists took ordinary wood chips from eucalyptus trees and heated them without oxygen, creating a material that grabs arsenic from polluted water. In lab tests, one gram of this biochar remove

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Apr 06 2026HEALTH

How Hospitals Choose the Right Medical Tools

Hospitals face a tough balancing act when picking new medical equipment. They need machines that work well and won't break the bank. The World Health Organization offers guidelines to help with this decision. These recommendations focus on two big things: what hospitals actually need and how to get

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Apr 06 2026FINANCE

Big Money Tests Blockchain’s Trust Problem

Wall Street is quietly racing ahead in crypto—but not the way you might think. Instead of betting on wild DeFi schemes, traditional finance is building regulated on-chain markets where trades settle instantly and never sleep. In early 2026, the New York Stock Exchange launched a round-the-clock toke

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Apr 06 2026HEALTH

Why Neurosurgeons in New Mexico Face Unfair Shots in Court

New Mexico’s doctors get judged by raw numbers—like how 0. 7% account for half the malpractice payouts in the state. But putting neurosurgeons in the same group as skin doctors misses a key fact: brains and spines are far riskier to operate on. Research shows neurosurgeons are sued far more often th

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