Tuesday, August 5
In The News
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> US track and field star Sha'Carri Richardson arrested for allegedly assaulting boyfriend and fellow Olympian Christian Coleman (More) | USA Track and Field Championships wrap up; see full results (More)
> Flaco Jiménez, six-time Grammy-winning Tejano music legend, dies at age 86 (More) | Jeannie Seely, Grammy-winning country musician, dies at age 85 (More)
> The 2025 World Swimming Championships wrap with Team USA leading all countries with 29 medals (More) | WNBA's Connecticut Sun reportedly to be sold for $325M; would be highest price ever for a professional women's sports franchise (More)
Science & Technology
> Google unveils Gemini Deep Think AI, a reasoning platform the company says can process multiple ideas at once (More) | Anthropic revokes OpenAI's license to the Claude large language model, claiming OpenAI engineers were using its coding tools to develop its next product (More)
> Sugar molecules used by cancer cells to evade the immune system may provide new treatment for type 1 diabetes; coating helps insulin-producing pancreatic beta cells evade autoimmune responses (More) | Type 1 diabetes explained (1440 Topics)
> Scientists build digital library of pollen from more than 18,000 plant species; archive will allow quick identification of pollen species, a task that typically takes hundreds of hours (More) | The evolution of flowers and bees (1440 Topics)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close lower Friday (S&P 500 -1.6%, Dow -1.2%, Nasdaq -2.2%) amid weaker-than-expected jobs report and downward revisions to past months' data, new tariff announcements (More) | See previous write-up (More)
> OPEC+ countries agree to raise oil production by over 547,000 barrels per day next month (More) | Berkshire Hathaway's operating earnings drop 4% in Q2 to $11.2B; holds $344B in cash (More) | Warren Buffett 101 (More)
> Delta tells lawmakers it will not use AI and customers' personalized data to set custom airfare (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> Special counsel's office launches investigation into former special counsel Jack Smith over alleged violations of the Hatch Act, which restricts federal employees' political activity; Smith led investigations into President Donald Trump's handling of the 2020 election, classified documents (More) | Hatch Act 101 (More, w/video)
> Dozens of Texas Democrats leave the state to block Republican-led redistricting effort (More) | Search continues for 45-year-old suspected gunman who killed four people at The Owl Bar in Anaconda, Montana, Friday (More)
> Israel's national security minister prays on Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, known to Jews as the Temple Mount, on Jewish holiday of Tisha B'Av, violating decades-old arrangement with Jordanian religious foundation (More) | Hamas releases video of hostage Evyatar David saying he is digging his own grave (More)
Adjusting to Life
Seeing the positive side is not as easy as it sounds, especially when it involves finances and/or one's health, and maybe one's relationships although that is not a critical aspect of one's life.
I remember someone telling me: HOPE FOR THE BEST, EXPECT THE WORST AND YOU ARE NEVER DISAPPOINTED... because it is always going to be one of those two. I suppose this is the humorous side of life to think like this.
When I get bad news, I immediately start to think how is this going to impact my life and what do I need to do to counter that impact. I suppose that is a good approach to take because you are not looking at it positively or negatively, just dealing with it as it happens.
When I was told I had cancer and then five years later when I was told I had contracted a second cancer, I had no positive or negative feelings; I just lived my life as if nothing was wrong. For six months, I got treatments on back-to-back days and then two days after that, I vomited so much my wife had to take me to the ER.
While throwing up that much is not very much fun and after the first time, I knew to expect it and could not stop it, I never felt MY LIFE IS OVER - THE END IS NEAR. I just dealt with it and went about living my life once it was behind me.
I don't know if the way I deal with life is the right way; I just know that the way I deal with life is the right way for me.
Moon's first-ever radio telescope ready for the dark side
Radio astronomers like a bit of peace and quiet, so they're sending an historic first radio telescope to the Moon. To block out Earthside radio signals, the Lunar Surface Electromagnetics Experiment (LuSEE-Night) will set up shop on the far side of the Moon.
Radio astronomy has revolutionized our understanding of the universe by opening up the vast electromagnetic spectrum that is invisible to the human eye. With giant radio telescopes to help, we have discovered pulsars, quasars, radio galaxies, interstellar molecules, supermassive black holes, and the microwave echoes of the Big Bang.
Unfortunately, listening to the music of the spheres is a frustrating task because Earth isn't exactly a quiet neighborhood when it comes to radio waves. Never mind terrestrial radio and television broadcasts, or even satellite signals or the ubiquitous presence of cell phones. There are also sparking car engines, microwave ovens, lightning strikes, GPS signals, reflections off the ionosphere, and even bird poop on the antenna to muck things up.
Monday, August 4
Headlines
The Bureau of Labor Statistics is an agency within the
Over 3,200 Boeing fighter jet workers went on strike. For the first time since 1996, members of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers working in St. Louis and Illinois stopped work after rejecting a second contract offer from Boeing on Sunday. They are responsible for assembling the F-15 and the F/A-18 defense aircraft, as well as building missiles. Boeing VP Dan Gillian said the company is “prepared for a strike and have fully implemented our contingency plan to ensure our non-striking workforce can continue supporting our customers.” Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg said on the company’s Q2 earnings call last week that he was not overly concerned about the impending strike, given that it was much smaller than the one that occurred last fall, when about 30,000 machinists in Washington state went on strike, impacting the production of 737 and 777 commercial jets.At A Glance
Photos from this year's World Dog Surfing Championships.
Longest recorded lightning bolt stretches 515 miles.
Russian volcano erupts after being dormant for roughly 600 years.
Nearly one in four US adult is serving as a caregiver.
See house portraits referencing famous movies.
The Utah mail center interpreting bad handwriting.
Explore an upcoming New York City train line.
World's oldest alpaca turns 27.
Clickbait: A face mask for Hannibal Lecter.
Historybook: Jazz legend Louis Armstrong born (1901); Anne Frank and family are captured after two years hiding from Nazis (1944); President Barack Obama born (1961); Meghan, Duchess of Sussex born (1981); Rwanda peace treaty signed (1993).
In The NEWS
The Watergate scandal, explained
The Watergate scandal was a major US political event in the early 1970s, triggered by a break‑in at Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate complex by operatives associated with President Richard Nixon’s reelection campaign.
The subsequent investigation uncovered serious campaign finance violations and a cover-up by the Nixon administration, resulting in nearly 50 criminal convictions and Nixon’s resignation—the only time a US president has resigned. Federal prosecutors adopted the name "The Big Cheese" to refer to the president.
The scandal spurred significant reforms: new campaign‑finance laws, stronger ethics oversight, and tighter limits on presidential authority.
... Read our full deep dive on the scandal here.
Also, check out ...
> Gerald Ford is the only president not elected to the office. (More)
> Scandals that got the "-gate" treatment. (More)
> The wife of Nixon's attorney general was kidnapped. (More)
Going Public
A 101 on IPOs
An initial public offering, or IPO, is the process of a private company becoming public. In an IPO, a company puts up shares of the company on the stock market for the public to purchase.
IPOs often have all the pomp and circumstance of a graduation ceremony, as they are one of the biggest milestones a company can achieve. From Apple in 1980 to Reddit in 2024, every public company has gone through an IPO at some point.
To begin the process, a company hires investment bankers (who earn roughly 7% of the IPO’s gross proceeds) to help set the organization’s target valuation range—an estimate of how much the company is worth—and schedule an IPO date. From there, the bankers market the IPO to hedge funds and other large potential investors.
Transitioning from a private to a public company allows an organization to more easily raise a significant amount of capital. This helps the company expand.
... Read our full take on IPOs here.
Also, check out...
> The 25 biggest IPOs of all time. (More)
> Inside the circus that is the opening day of an IPO. (More)
> How private companies can bypass the IPO process. (More)
Retired
It is important, before you retire, to plan out your retirement income. For instance, you can receive full benefits at age 67 which average $1,500/month nationwide. Then you can look at any retirement plan that you might have with your employer.
If I had stayed working at the Community College in TN, I would be receiving another $2,000/month in addition to my Social Security. Unfortunately, I was not that smart... instead, I was more interested in trying to increase my salary than planning for my retirement.
Looking back, that was a mistake.
Another option for you if saving money while you are working and then when you retire you can invest that money into a mutual fund or into a high-rate CD at your bank or credit union.
Mutual Funds historical earn 8-10% annually over a twenty-year period of time for the last 60 years. High-rate CDs are about half that amount and you receive about $400/$100,000.
At any rate, one must plan for retirement and the sad news is that most people don't so when they are eligible to retire, they are always caught off guard, and many are forced to continue working or work parttime to cover expenses.
One achievement that made a difference for my wife and I was becoming debt free 10 years before we retired, so we learned to always pay off our credit card debt before any interest was earned.
Be like a carpenter... measure twice, cut once
Scientists Find Secret Code in Human DNA
One person's junk is another's treasure.
An international team of scientists have found that strings of "junk" DNA in the human genome that were previously written off as having no useful function are actually pretty important after all.
The work, published as a study in the journal Science Advances, focuses on transposable elements, a class of DNA sequences that can "jump," via a biological copy-and-paste mechanism, to different locations in a genome. These "jumping genes" take up nearly 50 percent of human DNA; in other organisms, the proportion is even higher.


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