Make Charles lighten his workload? Dream on, chortles Camilla, after the King's 20 Italian engagements in four days following gruelling cancer treatment
It was a brief halt in their packed itinerary during last week's State Visit to Italy , but the Queen could only crease with laughter at the idea the King should lighten his workload, roaring: 'Dream on!'
Poor teeth brushing could be putting women at risk of migraines - with 60 per cent more likely to have body pain
Bacteria in the mouth were linked to pain conditions, researchers discovered, with good oral habits potentially easing the discomfort and improving overall wellbeing.
Calls for tighter controls on toxic 'forever' chemicals found in everything from non-stick frying pans to make-up
Now so-called 'forever' chemicals - which can take thousands of years to degrade - are being investigated after sparking concerns that the UK's regulation of the toxic elements is too lax.
King's tour artist is first to create paintings digitally as he draws 'whatever inspires them' to make unique record of global royal travels
Rather than look to Italian greats such as Leonardo da Vinci or Titian for inspiration this week, the monarch decided to commission something with a more modern bent.
Huge Trump tariff U-turn will exempt iPhone and laptops
The stunning reprieve emerged this morning but was in an update from customs officials quietly published last night.
Eight people now face manslaughter probe after British ex-RAF test pilot, 49, died in Italian Alps plane crash
Experienced flyer Dave Ashley, 49, died after his Leonardo Spa Aermacchi M346 plane crashed into a snow-covered mountain side three years ago.
Newcastle boss Eddie Howe admitted to hospital and will miss Magpies' clash with Man United tomorrow
Howe had felt unwell earlier in week following Monday's 3-0 win at Leicester and has been unable to take training.
America's Justice Department Shuts Down Its Cryptocurrency Fraud Unit
America's Justice Department "has shut down its unit that investigates cryptocurrency fraud," reports USA Today.
A Monday night memo from U.S. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said the shut down was "effective immediately."
Blanche directed the closure of the National Cryptocurrency Enforcement Team and ordered prosecutors to pivot to investigating transnational criminal organizations and terrorist groups that use crypto to engage in illicit transactions... In his four-page memo, Blanche said the new order was meant to bring the Justice Department in line with Trump's own Executive Order 14178, which decreed that clarity and certainty regarding enforcement policy "are essential to supporting a vibrant and inclusive digital economy and innovation in digital assets." Blanche, one of several Trump criminal defense lawyers at the top ranks of DOJ, said the president "has also made clear that '[w]e are going to end the regulatory weaponization against digital assets'..."
Consistent with that narrowing of its cryptocurrency enforcement policy, the DOJ Market Integrity and Major Frauds Unit will also cease cryptocurrency enforcement to focus on other administration priorities, including immigration and procurement fraud, Blanche said.
The Washington Post got this assessment from Yesha Yadav, a Vanderbilt University law professor who closely follows cryptocurrency and financial markets. "It's hard to underestimate the importance this task force has had ... in pursuing some really huge crypto hacks and cases."
More from USA Today:
Public corruption and transnational crime experts warned that shutting down the unit could divert critical resources from efforts to stop criminals and corrupt regimes from using cryptocurrency for illicit gain, even as Trump claims he wants to crack down on them. "Dangerous US adversaries rely on cryptocurrencies to launder money and evade sanctions," said Nate Sibley, an anti-corruption expert and director of the Kleptocracy Initiative at the conservative Hudson Institute think tank in Washington, D.C., in a post on X. "If this is accurate, hard to see how it squares with — for example-cracking down on cartel finances or maximum pressure sanctions on Iran...."
Trump's so-called "memecoin" surged from less than $10 on the Saturday before his inauguration to as high as $74.59 before eventually giving up some of its gains. The token, branded $TRUMP, has been criticized by ethics experts as a conflict of interest for the president since the company could likely benefit from his pro-crypto policies...
Last month, Trump signed an order to create a federal Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, signaling new federal support for cryptocurrency in general and Bitcoin in particular.
Since the first-ever White House crypto summit in March, America's Securities and Exchange Commission "has dropped more than a dozen cases against crypto firms," notes the Washington Post:
Last month, both the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency pledged to stop evaluating banks based on "reputational risk" — a practice that some venture capitalists have claimed unfairly "de-banked" founders of cryptocurrency start-ups.
In other news, executives from cryptocurrency exchange Binance "met with Treasury Department officials last month," reports the Wall Street Journal, asking them to remove a U.S. monitor overseeing their compliance with anti-money-laundering laws, according to people familiar with the talks.
The article adds that Binance is also concurrently "exploring" a deal with the Trump family to list its new dollar-pegged stablecoin which "could catapult it into a huge market and potentially bring in billions in profit for the family. "
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Michael Schumacher signs Jackie Stewart crash helmet - with the aid of his wife - for charity auction... 12 years after horror skiing accident
With the guiding hand of wife Corinna, the German has appended his initials 'MS' on the item that will be sold to raise funds for Sir Jackie Stewart's Race Against Dementia charity.
Nigel Farage helps vigilante gardener fill in 'monstrous' potholes with flowers as Reform leader says it should 'embarrass every county council in the country'
In a video shared to social media platform TikTok, the Reform UK party leader was shown assisting viral gardener Harry Smith-Haggett with his unusual roadwork in Staffordshire.
The Chase expert reveals the one 'lost episode' with celebrity line-up that ITV refuses to broadcast - despite repeating hundreds of episodes
In a decade-long binge, the fan, 52, from Kent, has recorded detailed statistics on all but one instalment, right down to the prize pots racked up and every contestant and Chaser's answering accuracy.
Dagenham teacher banned after admitting sexual relationship with school pupil
The teacher has admitted having a sexual relationship with one of his pupils
For the First Time Astronomers Watch a Black Hole 'Wake Up' in Real-Time
Black holes "often exhibit long periods of dormancy," writes Popular Science, adding that astronomers had never witnessed a black hole "wake up" in real time. "Until now..."
In February of 2024 X-ray bursts were spotted coming out of a black hole named Ansky by Lorena Hernández-García at Chile's Valparaiso University, according to the article. And what astronomers have now seen "challenges prevailing theories about black hole lifecycles."
Hernández-García and collaborators then determined the black hole was displaying a phenomenon known as a quasiperiodic eruption, or QPE [a short-lived flaring event...] While a black hole inevitably destroys everything it captures, objects behave differently during their impending demise. A star, for example, generally stretches apart into a bright, hot, fast-spinning disc known as an accretion disc. Most astronomers have theorized that black holes generate QPEs when a comparatively small object like a star or even a smaller black hole collides with an accretion disc. In the case of Ansky, however, there isn't any evidence linking it to the death of a star.
"The bursts of X-rays from Ansky are ten times longer and ten times more luminous than what we see from a typical QPE," said MIT PhD student and study co-author Joheen Chakraborty. "Each of these eruptions is releasing a hundred times more energy than we have seen elsewhere. Ansky's eruptions also show the longest cadence ever observed, of about 4.5 days." Astronomers must now consider other explanations for Ansky's remarkable behavior. One theory posits that the accretion disc could come from nearby galactic gas pulled in by the black hole instead of a star. If true, then the X-rays may originate from high energy shocks to the disc caused by a small cosmic object repeatedly passing through and disrupting orbital matter.
It's detailed in a study published on April 11 in Nature Astronomy....
Meanwhile, scientists "have uncovered the strongest evidence yet for the existence of elusive intermediate-mass black holes," reports SciTechDaily.
And there's more black hole news from RockDoctor (Slashdot reader #15,477):
Given the recent work on galaxy-centre Super-Massive Black Holes (SMBHs), you may be surprised to learn that the only Stellar-Mass Black Holes (SMBHs ... uh, "BHs") identified to-date have been by their gravitational waves, as they merge with another BH or a neutron star. But the long-running OGLE (Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment) project (1992 — present) has recently confirmed that it has detected an isolated BH not orbiting another bright object, or "swallowing" much of anything...
In this case, 16 other telescopes performed sensitive astrometry (position measurement) over 11 years including the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). These multiple measurements plot an ellipse on the sky, mirroring the movement of the Earth around it's orbit — parallax. Which means this is a relatively close object (1520 parsecs / ~5000 light years).... And there is no sign of a third light emitting body nearby, which means this is an isolated black hole, not orbiting any other body (or, indeed, with any other [small] star orbiting it).
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Microsoft total recalls Recall totally to Copilot+ PCs
Redmond hopes you’ve forgotten or got over why everyone hated it the first time
After temporarily shelving its controversial Windows Recall feature amid a wave of backlash, Microsoft is back at it - now quietly slipping the screenshotting app into the Windows 11 Release Preview channel for Copilot+ PCs, signaling its near-readiness for general availability.…
Locals surprised that Essex town named 'best place to live in the UK'
Even the best place to live in the UK has a problem with potholes, according to its residents
Global datacenter electricity use to double by 2030, say policy wonks. Yup, it's AI
No worries, just use neural networks to optimize systems powering neural networks
Analysis Global datacenter electricity use is set to more than double by 2030 - slightly surpassing Japan's total consumption - with AI named as the biggest driver.…
AI is making hyperscalers' sustainability pledges look more and more like a Hail Mary
Carbon capture, SMRs, fusion power - tech titans' climate strategies are packed with moon shots
Comment AI's appetite for power is exploding. Hyperscalers have only just begun to adopt Nvidia's 120 kW-per-rack systems, and the GPU giant is already charting a course toward 600 kW designs.…
Brooklyn Beckham packs on the PDA with wife Nicola Peltz as they lock lips at Coachella after his family 'blanked them' on their wedding anniversary
Brooklyn Beckham and his wife Nicola Peltz put on a loved up display as they attended Coachella festival in California on Friday, amid ongoing tensions with his family.
Tammy Abraham starts PRAYING after horrendous head clash knocked out AC Milan team-mate Mike Maignan
The clash of heads occured when the Frenchman came rushing out of his area in the 54th minute and was unable to slow down his momentum before colliding with Jimenez.
Coachella revelers slam 'diabolical' cost of food and drink as onlookers left in disbelief
Not only have guests so far had to battle car park chaos and near record-breaking temperatures, but many are only just discovering how much they will be forking out on supplies during the event.