Saturday, August 16
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> The 2028 Los Angeles Olympics and Paralympics to sell naming rights to the competition venues, a first for the Olympic Games (More) | The challenge of hosting the Olympics (1440 Topics)
> LL Cool J tapped to host 2025 MTV Video Music Awards (Sept. 7); will be simulcast on CBS, along with MTV and Paramount+, for first time (More)
> The 2025-26 English Premier League season kicks off today; see predicted order of finish and previews for all 20 teams (More) | NBA approves sale of Boston Celtics to private equity mogul Bill Chisholm at a $6.1B valuation, a record price for an American sports team (More)
Science & Technology
> Leaked internal Meta document reveals the company's AI chatbots were allowed to engage in "sensual" or "romantic" conversations with minors; company says it has since struck the guideline; see investigative report (More)
> AI drug discovery platform helps researchers sift through tens of millions of potential drug compounds to identify new classes of antibiotics; two candidates cleared drug-resistant gonorrhea and staph infections in mice (More) | How superbugs evolve (1440 Topics)
> Scientists create new stable carbon structure, the first such demonstration since "buckyballs"—ball-shaped arrangements of 60 carbon atoms—in 1990 (More)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close near flatline (S&P 500 +0.0%, Dow -0.0%, Nasdaq -0.0%) as US producer price index—key inflation metric tracking wholesale product prices—shows 0.9% rise in July, the highest monthly gain in three years (More)
> Average US 30-year fixed mortgage rate drops to 6.58%, the lowest level since October (More) | Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway reveals roughly $1.6B stake in UnitedHealth (More)
> Nearly 16% of venture-backed deals in 2025 so far have been down rounds, when a startup raises money at a lower valuation than in its previous funding round; figure marks a decade high, per new data (More) | Venture capital explained using Lego bricks (1440 Topics)
Politics & World Affairs
> California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) will call a special election Nov. 4 to vote on redrawn maps in an effort to secure five more Democratic House seats in midterms; follows Texas' plan to redistrict in favor of Republicans (More)
> Florida announces new $6M detention center, "Deportation Depot," opening in two weeks; will house over 1,300 people (More) | Supreme Court allows Mississippi law requiring social media to verify children's ages to stay in effect for now (More)
> Tropical Storm Erin expected to reach hurricane strength later today, with winds of at least 74 mph—first hurricane of 2025 Atlantic season; see path (More) | How we track hurricanes (1440 Topics)
SOURCE: 1440 NEWS
The Art of Business
During my 45 year career, I worked with several organizations from which I always gained some sort of insight into the marketplace of commerce. These organizations included:
- a non profit
- small/large manufacturing
- government
- community colleges
- colleges and universities
- global companies
- consulting - self employment
- retail companies
Each company had its own set of rules, procedures, and protocols for those who wanted to stay there and advance within. For me, each employer was a stepping stone to more experience and adventures.
However, all companies had something in common and that was, if an employee wanted to get ahead, that employee MUST LEARN TO KISS ASS. It did not matter if it was a Christian company or not. ASS KISSING WAS THE NORM.
Aside from that, one could survive by following some basic common sense rules:
- Be the first to arrive, the last to leave
- Make sure that you outperform others
- Do what you need to do to get the job done
- Don't look for rewards just do your job
- Be willing to play with others when necessary
- Don't bad mouth your boss
- Learn as much as you can as quick as you can
- Be willing to volunteer but be selective
Everyone within an organization is REPLACEABLE from the janitor, to the manager, to the Vice President, to the CEO, President up to and including the Chairman of the Board.
It is all about RESULTS, ACHIEVING GOALS, and GENERATING REVENUES.
Van Gogh’s iconic ‘The Starry Night’ painting helps discover a new quantum vortex
Famous American writer Isaac Asimov once said, “There is an art to science, and science in art.” A new study proves this quote right by highlighting a never-before-seen connection between Vincent van Gogh’s famous painting “The Starry Night” and quantum physics.
The main focus of the study is the Kelvin–Helmholtz instability (KHI), an effect observed in the everyday world when two fluids slide past each other at different speeds, which can sculpt waves and whorls in clouds, rivers, or ocean surfaces.
“Our research began with a simple question. Can the Kelvin–Helmholtz instability happen in quantum fluids?” Hiromitsu Takeuchi, lead study author and an associate professor at Osaka Metropolitan University, said.
Friday, August 15
Headlines
Patrick T. Fallon/Getty Images
The producer price index report showed that inflation for businesses rose. The July PPI report indicated that inflation for businesses, aka “wholesale inflation,” increased by 0.9% last month, more than the 0.2% forecast. Economist Stephen Brown at Capital Economics said in a client note that some of the rise is attributable to higher costs in portfolio management, which “won’t concern the FOMC”—the Federal Open Market Committee, which is the part of the Federal Reserve that makes monetary policy. However, following the report, the odds of the Fed cutting rates by 0.25% at its meeting next month fell from 100% to 95%, according to the CME Group, a derivatives exchange. At the Jackson Hole Economic Symposium next week, Fed Chair Jerome Powell is expected to lay out his vision of the economy.Robert Reich
If Democrats got off their asses, here’s what they’d be doing now
Nine critical steps
Friends,
We have endured more than six months of the most despotic regime in American history.
Republican members of Congress have disgraced themselves and the nation by enabling it. They are traitors to the Constitution, the rule of law, and American democracy.
What of the Democrats? Individually, some have shown real heroism. But as a party they are disunited, ineffective, seemingly afraid of their shadows. “Epsteingate” offers a chance for Dems to derail Trump for a time, but it is not a strategy.
Nine critical steps
Friends,
We have endured more than six months of the most despotic regime in American history.
Republican members of Congress have disgraced themselves and the nation by enabling it. They are traitors to the Constitution, the rule of law, and American democracy.
What of the Democrats? Individually, some have shown real heroism. But as a party they are disunited, ineffective, seemingly afraid of their shadows. “Epsteingate” offers a chance for Dems to derail Trump for a time, but it is not a strategy.
At A Glance
World Humanoid Robot Games begin in Beijing.
Map shows levels of forever chemicals near your home.
Using probability to explain the Bermuda Triangle.
Time publishes first Girls of the Year list.
The benefits of 7,000 daily steps.
Woman finds natural diamond in Arkansas state park.
Check out rejected vanity plates.
The rise of carnivore babies.
Clickbait: Colorado's "Frankenstein bunnies"?
Historybook: Napoleon Bonaparte born (1769); Iconic chef and TV host Julia Child born (1912); Panama Canal opens (1914); Woodstock music festival begins (1969); Civil rights activist Julian Bond dies (2015).
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> President Donald Trump announces 2025 Kennedy Center honorees, including KISS, Sylvester Stallone, George Strait, Gloria Gaynor, and Michael Crawford; says he was involved in selection, will present awards in December (More)
> University of Kansas receives $300M gift from US businessman David Booth, thought to be among the largest single donations in college sports history (More)
> The 77th Emmy Awards winners announced in select categories; Beyoncé wins first Emmy for costume design for Netflix's "Beyoncé Bowl" NFL halftime special (More)
Science & Technology
> US officials embed GPS trackers in various shipments of advanced AI chips to monitor illegal diversions of shipments to China, reports suggest (More)
> Passively powered flying devices can reach 45 miles above Earth, allowing researchers to study the mesosphere; atmospheric layer is too high for weather balloons but too low for satellites (More) | Visualize planet Earth, from core to atmosphere (1440 Topics)
> Physicists use sound waves to store quantum information; new approach can store quantum memory for 30 times longer than conventional techniques (More) | Explore the best resources we've found on quantum mechanics (1440 Topics)
Business & Markets
> US stock markets close up (S&P 500 +0.3%, Dow +1.0%, Nasdaq +0.1%); S&P 500 notches record high as investors bet on potential interest rate cuts (More)
> CoinDesk owner Bullish shares close up more than 83% in NYSE debut, valuing the cryptocurrency exchange at roughly $10B; Bullish launched in 2021 and is backed by tech billionaire Peter Thiel (More)
> US tariff revenue reaches fresh monthly record of nearly $28B in July, up from $8B a year ago; US budget deficit grew to $291B last month (More) | How much federal revenue comes from tariffs (More) | Who pays for tariffs? (1440 Topics)
Politics & World Affairs
> Germany and allies pledge up to $500M in military aid to Ukraine via new NATO supply line (More) | President Donald Trump tells Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and European leaders he will push for a ceasefire in tomorrow's meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska (More)
> Prosecutors seek retrial for a rape charge in Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein's New York sex crimes case, leaving Sept. 30 sentencing for a separate sexual assault charge in limbo (More)
> Air Canada suspends most flights through Saturday due to an ongoing labor dispute with its flight attendant union; cancellations are expected to impact approximately 130,000 passengers each day (More)
SOURCE: 1440 NEWS
Our Working Futures
Why do we work?
Obviously, to make money... but, isn't there oftentimes more to it than just that?
We work:
- to survive
- to get out of the house
- to have a career
- to contribute to society
- to raise a family
- to acquire more
- to go on vacations
What do you think it would be like if we did not have to work?
- We would get bored
- We might get into trouble
- We would get lazy
- We would become depressed
- We might rely on drugs
- We would have more children
- We would always be in the lower class
- We would complain
I am sure there are other negatives to mention but I just wanted to give you an idea of where I was going.
Would there be in pros to not working?
Yes, there would.
- We would have lots of free time
- We could explore hobbies
- Spend more time with family and friends
- We could spend time with a vege garden
- We could spend more time exercising
Again, these are just a few... you probably have other ideas and/or suggestions.
Why am I writing about this?
Because...
when humanoid robots arrive and take our jobs, most of us will be without a source of income unless our government provides us with a guaranteed minimum income, after unemployment insurance expires.
This minimum income will allow us to pay bills but have very few extras that work wages allowed us to buy.
The fact of the matter is that ROBOTS are coming and I believe it will be sooner than later and we all need to prepare ourselves for that eventuality.
You federal, state, and local leaders CAN NO LONGER STOP THIS FROM HAPPENING.
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