Sunday, November 17
SpaceX's Dragon
Dragon successfully completed the orbital reboost of the International Space Station at approximately 12:50 p.m. ET (1750 GMT), Nov. 8. Read our full story.
SpaceX will boost the space station for the first time Friday (Nov. 8), as the company prepares to eventually kill the orbiting complex.
A Dragon cargo spacecraft docked to the International Space Station (ISS) will fire its engines for 12.5 minutes on Friday (Nov. 8), NASA officials said at a press conference Monday (Nov. 4). Other spacecraft have done this before, but it will be a first for a SpaceX capsule — and an important precursor to a bigger Dragon vehicle that will one day drive the ISS to its demise. READ MORE...
Saturday, November 16
White Supremacy
- beautiful or attractive
- intellectually gifted
- physically talented
- artistically talented
- musically talented
- entrepreneurial material
- gifted speakers
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Satire news outlet The Onion purchases Alex Jones' InfoWars with backing from Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting families, owed nearly $1.5B by Jones following defamation lawsuits (More)
> Craig Melvin tapped to replace Hoda Kotb as "Today" show coanchor; Kotb announced in September she'd be stepping down after more than two decades (More)
> Skiing legend Lindsey Vonn to come out of retirement at age 40, more than five years since her last competition (More) | Tampa Bay Rays to play 2025 home games at New York Yankees' spring-training field in Tampa after Hurricane Milton tore roof off Tropicana Field (More)
Science & Technology
> OpenAI to launch AI-powered agent capable of independently carrying out tasks, such as booking travel and sending emails; "Operator" to launch in January, compete with similar products from Anthropic and Microsoft (More) | The rapid rise of OpenAI (More, w/video)
> Researchers develop algorithm to predict when lithium-ion batteries are about to catch fire by analyzing sounds from inside the devices; batteries can briefly emit flames almost as hot as a blowtorch during failure (More) | Why Li-ion batteries combust (More)
> Skull's bone marrow continues to grow and expand over time, study finds, allowing production of healthy new blood cells as we age (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close lower (S&P 500 -0.6%, Dow -0.5%, Nasdaq -0.6%) as Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell signals caution on further rate cuts (More) | Disney shares close up 6% after company reports growth in profits and customers, forecasts stronger-than-expected earnings outlook (More)
> European Union fines Meta $841M for violating antitrust laws by tying its Marketplace online classified ads business to its Facebook social network (More) | US regulators reportedly seeking to put Google under federal supervision similar to how banks are overseen (More)
> Coach owner Tapestry ends bid for $8.5B acquisition of Michael Kors owner Capri following regulatory hurdles (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> President-elect Donald Trump taps Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to head Department of Health and Human Services; role requires Senate confirmation (More) | See background on Kennedy Jr. (More) | See all picks announced so far (More)
> NY Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) unveils revised New York City congestion pricing plan, the first such plan in the US; plan would charge a daily $9 toll on most vehicles entering Manhattan's central business district during peak hours (More)
> Tropical Storm Sara forms in Caribbean Sea, expected to bring life-threatening flash-flooding and mudslides across Central America, including Honduras (More)
Family
Tiny Earth Light Years Away
The nearest single star to the Solar System has just yielded up a rare and wonderful treasure.
Around a red dwarf known as Barnard's star, which lies just 5.96 light-years away, astronomers have found evidence of an exoplanet.
And not just any exoplanet. This fascinating world, known as Barnard b, is tiny, clocking in with a minimum mass of 37 percent of the mass of Earth. That's a little shy of half a Venus, and about 3.5 Marses.
The reason it's so marvelous is that tiny exoplanets are really, really hard to find. Although Barnard b is not habitable to life as we know it, its discovery is leading us closer to the identification of Earth-sized worlds that may be scattered elsewhere throughout the galaxy. READ MORE...
Friday, November 15
POWER to the PEOPLE
It has long been established that PEOPLE when UNITED have an enormous amount of POWER... Moreso, than WEALTH and POSITION.
This was proven in the 2024 election when AMERICANS in overwhelming numbers voted for the Republicans versus the Democrats to run our government.
What does this really tell you?
SEVENTY ONE MILLION Americans will be AGAINST our new president and SEVENTY FOUR MILLION Americans will support our new president.
- The Electoral Votes don't matter
- The States for Trump don't matter
- The Trifecta does not matter
SEVENTY ONE MILLION people is enough people to rock the boat over and over again and cast negativity around the Trump administration... especially if ALL his cabinet choices are approved by the SENATE...
What the Democrats have going for them is that the REPUBLICANS typically have never been able to handle complete power so the odds are they will ARGUE AMONG THEMSELVES and get very little accomplished.
- Trump will be able to achieve energy independence again
- Trump will be able to reduce the size of government via DOGE
- Trump will be able to improve the economy
- Trump will be able to restore global respect back to American
- Trump will be able to install judges
Change
Most of us, who are tuned into life, understand that change is part of what we must live through... that is not to say that we embrace all change or that we look forward to change, especially in the areas in which our lives are lived.
That is to say that WE LIKE THE STATUS QUO...
We can live with higher prices and we can live with lying and deceitful politicians... BUT, when change is FORCED UPON US, we have a tendency to REBEL.
REBELLION to us is not violent but PASSIVE RESISTANCE... similar to Ghandi's philosophy.
For instance, when our Federal Government orders us to BUY ELECTRIC VEHICLES... then our first reaction is WHY???
- There are not enough charging stations
- Our energy is not adequate to support EVs
- EVs cost more than gasoline vehicles
- EV batteries are expensive
- EV batteries last 8-10 years
- Resale value of EV is very low
- Average Annual Salary in 2024 is $60,000
- Average Family spends about $7,500/month
- Average Family spends about $90,000/year
- extraordinary expenses
- vacations
- savings
- car purchases
- children in college
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> Actor and filmmaker John Krasinski named People magazine's Sexiest Man Alive for 2024 (More)
> Timothy West, British stage and screen actor, dies at age 90 (More) | "Full House" actor Dave Coulier reveals stage 3 Non-Hodgkin lymphoma cancer diagnosis (More)
> Disney settles class-action lawsuit with 9,000 female workers alleging they were paid less than their male counterparts in comparable roles (More)
Science & Technology
> Researchers use data from millions of smartphones across the globe to map Earth's ionosphere, the layer of charged particles in the upper atmosphere (More)
> Scientists identify the gene controlling tomato sweetness, genetically modify the plant to control sugar levels without affecting size (More)
> Well-preserved fossil allows scientists to reconstruct the brain of a bird living 80 million years ago, during the Mesozoic era; discovery sheds light on the evolution of avian intelligence (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close near flatline (S&P 500 +0.0%, Dow +0.1%, Nasdaq -0.3%) after consumer price index rose 2.6% year-over-year in October, in line with expectations (More) | Netherlands-based Just Eat Takeaway sells Grubhub for $650M four years after buying it for $7.3B (More)
> Spirit Airlines shares close down 59% on reports company is preparing to file for bankruptcy after failed merger talks with Frontier Airlines (More) | Rivian shares close up nearly 14% after Volkswagen boosts investment in the EV company to $5.8B as part of new joint venture (More)
> Swedish payments giant Klarna files for US initial public offering, though number of shares and price range of offering are yet to be determined; analysts value Klarna around $15B (More) | Want to learn about IPOs, and tons of other topics? Join 1440 Business & Finance (Sign up here)
Politics & World Affairs
> CIA official Asif William Rahman is arrested in Cambodia, charged with violating the Espionage Act by leaking top-secret classified documents on Israel's retaliation plans against Iran last month (More)
> Pakistan reveals plans to add hospital beds to treat the nearly 70,000 people suffering respiratory issues on average each day amid record levels of smog in eastern Punjab province (More) | See photos of smog, visible from space (More)
> National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration releases US snowfall predictions, expected to be lower this year due to La Niña weather pattern, with some northwestern and Great Lakes states experiencing higher snowfall (More)
Education
In 1966, I graduated from high school and enrolled in college in North Carolina. It cost $500 each semester and my parents paid for my first semester. After that, I worked full time while I attended college, and paid my own tuition, books, fees, housing, and food.
At the end of 5 semesters, I was not enjoying college, so I dropped out and enlisted in the US Navy. After two years in the Navy, I returned to college and the GI Bill (of which I contributed nothing but my time in the military) paid for my last two years of college but two years of graduate school.
I also worked full time while I was attending college and graduate school.
Before leaving school (1966-1968) I worked in a Hosiery Mill dying socks during the afternoon from 3-11pm. When I returned to school (1972-1974), I worked at a biological supply house. When I went to grad school (1979-1981) I directed a non-profit.
My two years in the military was completed during the Vietnam War and as such I qualified for ALL GI BILL benefits... that in my case, happened to be 4 years of higher education.
It was a small price to pay for the EDUCATION that the GI BILL paid for.
During my 45-year career, my BA degree and my MBA degree OPENED DOORS that would have otherwise been closed... however, I very seldom used any of my education during my career. Not only, was the knowledge acquired seldom used, MY GRADES or GPA was NEVER a deciding factor for my employment even when I was hired by colleges to teach classes.
If by some chance, I had an opportunity to live my life over again, I would have never gone to college in the first place.
I would have enlisted into the military right out of high school and retired twenty years later at 38 years of age. I would have done this because my military pre-testing scores were high enough to keep me from being in the infantry.
At 38 years of age, I could have saved my retirement money and used my technical training to work a second career, where I could have retired at 58 or longer. If I was smart, I would have found a company that had a retirement programs, so that at age 67, I would have been entitled to THREE RETIREMENT INCOMES... plus, my medical would be completely covered for the rest of my life.
Going to college is not always the best course of action to take...