Thursday, September 4
Headlines
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Robert Reich
How to understand his desire to control the Fed (and everything else)
Friends,
Today the Senate Banking Committee will consider Trump’s nomination of economic adviser Stephen Miran to be a governor of the Federal Reserve. Trump would like to get Miran confirmed in time for the Fed’s rate-setting meeting in two weeks.
Meanwhile, a federal judge has asked lawyers for Lisa Cook, the Fed governor whom Trump is trying to fire, to file more briefs as she pushes back against Trump. The law says a president can fire a member of the board only “for cause,” which normally means professional neglect or malfeasance. Trump alleges that Cook has committed mortgage fraud, but she has not been charged with any crime or convicted of any wrongdoing.
If Trump succeeds in getting Miran confirmed and firing Cook, he would be on track to have a majority on the Fed board. He’ll get a chance to name a new chair in May when Jerome Powell’s term ends.
At A Glance
Where Powerball winners could win the most (or least).
Visualizing US fall foliage predictions.
Ranking the best US cities for retirees.
Why credit cards have microchips in them.
Disney's Cinderella Castle is getting a makeover.
... and see the castle transform over the years.
Rectangle-shaped mega telescope could spot alien worlds.
What drink is healthier: alcohol or THC?
Clickbait: Hot mic catches Putin and Xi discussing immortality.
Historybook: Edmond Halley observes Halley’s Comet for first time (1682); Beyoncé born (1981); Google is founded (1998); "Crocodile Hunter" host Steve Irwin killed by a stingray (2006); Comedian Joan Rivers dies (2014).
In The NEWS
Sports, Entertainment, & Culture
> French actor Gérard Depardieu to face criminal trial over alleged rape accusations from an actress in 2018; Depardieu was found guilty in May of sexually assaulting two women in aseparate case (More)
> George Raveling, basketball Hall of Fame coach and longtime Nike exec, dies of cancer at age 88 (More) | Ohio State tops college football AP poll after Week One, with Penn State and LSU rounding out the top three (More)
> "Call of Duty" live-action film adaptation in the works at Paramount; the video game franchise has sold 500 million copies worldwide and brought in over $30B in revenue (More)
Science & Technology
> Cancer study reveals how pilocytic astrocytoma tumors, the most common form of childhood brain cancer, use a molecule called glutamate to grow (More)
> Engineers develop rubber band capable of generating electricity from body heat; could provide passive power for health monitoring, smartwatches, and more (More)
> Brain-computer interface allows paralyzed patient to control robotic arm via thought; device uses AI to decipher and transmit brain signals (More)
Business & Markets
> Federal judge rules Google can keep Chrome browser but cannot forge exclusive contracts and must share search data with rivals to rectify the company's monopoly on search; parent company Alphabet's shares rose in after-hours trading (More)
> US stock markets close down (S&P 500 -0.7%, Dow -0.6%, Nasdaq -0.8%) as President Donald Trump seeks expedited Supreme Court hearing on last week's lower court ruling that found most of his administration's tariffs illegal (More)
> Anthropic closes $13B funding round at a $183B valuation, roughly triple what the AI startup was worth during its last raise in March (More)
Politics & World Affairs
> President Donald Trump announces move of Space Command headquarters from Colorado to Alabama, following 2021 Air Force recommendation; decision is expected to bring $1B annually to Huntsville, Alabama's local economy (More)
> House Oversight Committee publicly posts Justice Department files on Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, mostly containing information already publicly known (More) | US strikes suspected drug-carrying vessel in the Caribbean, killing at least 11 people allegedly tied to Venezuela's Tren de Aragua gang (More)
> Second earthquake hits Afghanistan yesterday as death toll from Sunday's quake exceeds 1,400 people (More) | Israeli army begins ground operation in Gaza City after approving plans last month (More)
Going to College
I received bachelor's and master's degrees and worked for 45 years in and around education, some of that time was spent teaching.
Looking back, I wish I had never gone to college but enlisted in the Air Force, learned a technical trade, retired after twenty years, and started a second career at thirty-eight, and retired from that one at fifty-eight, where I could have begun a third career, retiring at seventy-eight.
Even if I had not the desire for three careers, two retirement programs and forty years of savings would have put me into a great retirement position.
The Air Force and the Navy are the two branches of the military that have the best training programs that you can use as a civilian.
Going this route, you would encounter no student loans that you would have to pay back for the rest of your career.
Think about this option because having to pay back student loans, and losing your job because of robots can be devastating for you.
Quantum memory array brings us closer to a quantum RAM
The internet, social media, and digital technologies have completely transformed the way we establish commercial, personal and professional relationships. At its core, this society relies on the exchange of information that is expressed in terms of bits. This basic unit of information can be either a 0 or a 1, and it is usually represented in electrical circuits, for instance, as two voltage levels (one representing the bit in state 0 and the other representing state 1).
The ability to store and manipulate bits efficiently lays the basis of digital electronics and enables modern devices to perform a variety of tasks, ranging from sending emails and playing music to numerical simulations. These processes are only possible thanks to key hardware components like random-access memory (RAM), which offer temporary storage and on-demand retrieval of data.












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