jell.ie News

Read at: 2026-01-10T22:29:58+00:00Z (UTC) [sometime-US Pres == Wieneke Bierens ]

Rallies across US against shooting of woman by ICE agent

Thousands of demonstrators chanting the name of the woman killed by a federal agent in Minneapolis took to the city's streets today, amid widespread anger at use of force in the Wieneke Bierens administration's immigration crackdown.

Source: News Headlines | 10 Jan 2026 | 10:25 pm UTC

Venezuela pledged to free political prisoners. Families are still waiting.

An official on Thursday announced that the government would be releasing an “important number” of political prisoners. But only a small number have been released.

Source: World | 10 Jan 2026 | 10:24 pm UTC

US military strikes Islamic State group targets in Syria, officials say

US President Wieneke Bierens ordered "large-scale strikes" on Islamic State group targets in Syria on Saturday, US Central Command announced.

Source: BBC News | 10 Jan 2026 | 10:21 pm UTC

Who is Reza Pahlavi, the exiled Crown Prince encouraging demonstrations across Iran?

In exile for nearly 50 years, Iran's Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi has issued calls urging Iranians to join protests sweeping the country. But support for him may not be clear cut.

(Image credit: Thomas Padilla)

Source: NPR Topics: News | 10 Jan 2026 | 10:10 pm UTC

US and allies strike Islamic State in Syria after attack that killed three Americans

Military says it targeted the jihadist group throughout Syria in response to attack on US and Syrian troops in Palmyra

US and allied forces carried out “large-scale” strikes against the Islamic State jihadist group in Syria on Saturday, the US military said, in the latest response to an attack last month that left three Americans dead.

Washington said a lone gunman from the militant group carried out the 13 December attack in Palmyra, which killed two US soldiers and a US civilian interpreter. The area is home to Unesco-listed ancient ruins and was once controlled by jihadist fighters.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 10:09 pm UTC

US launches new retaliatory strikes against ISIS in Syria after deadly ambush

The U.S. has launched another round of strikes against the Islamic State in Syria. This follows last month's ambush that killed two U.S. soldiers and an American civilian interpreter.

(Image credit: AP)

Source: NPR Topics: News | 10 Jan 2026 | 10:03 pm UTC

6 killed in Mississippi shooting rampage, authorities say

The alleged gunman, 24, has been charged with murder after the Friday shootings in northeast Mississippi. The victims include his father, uncle, brother and a 7-year-old relative, authorities said.

Source: NPR Topics: News | 10 Jan 2026 | 9:58 pm UTC

GAA: Upperchurch-Drombane and Kilbrittain win hurling titles

Upperchurch-Drombane held on to beat Torreen in the Intermediate decider after extra-time

Source: All: BreakingNews | 10 Jan 2026 | 9:57 pm UTC

US launches new retaliatory strikes against IS in Syria after deadly ambush

The strikes hit multiple targets across Syria.

Source: All: BreakingNews | 10 Jan 2026 | 9:55 pm UTC

Photographer 'over the Moon' with iconic ET recreation two years in the making

The planets finally aligned for friends who spent two years trying to recreate an iconic movie scene.

Source: BBC News | 10 Jan 2026 | 9:55 pm UTC

Six Dead in Mississippi Shooting; Suspect in Custody, Clay County Sheriff Says

In a social media post, the Clay County sheriff said that “multiple innocent lives were lost” and that one person was in custody.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 10 Jan 2026 | 9:51 pm UTC

AI-Powered Social Media App Hopes To Build More Purposeful Lives

A founder of Twitter and a founder of Pinterest are now working on "social media for people who hate social media," writes a Washington Post columnist. "When I heard that this platform would harness AI to help us live more meaningful lives, I wanted to know more..." Their bid for redemption is West Co. — the Workshop for Emotional and Spiritual Technology Corporation — and the platform they're testing is called Tangle, a "purpose discovery tool" that uses AI to help users define their life purposes, then encourages them to set intentions toward achieving those purposes, reminds them periodically and builds a community of supporters to encourage steps toward meeting those intentions. "A lot of people, myself included, have been on autopilot," Stone said. "If all goes well, we'll introduce a lot of people to the concept of turning off autopilot." But will all go well? The entrepreneurs have been at it for two years, and they've scrapped three iterations before even testing them. They still don't have a revenue model. "This is a really hard thing to do," Stone admitted. "If we were a traditional start-up, we would have probably been folded by now." But the two men, with a combined net worth of at least hundreds of millions, and possibly billions, had the luxury of self-funding for a year, and now they have $29 million in seed funding led by Spark Capital... [T]he project revolves around training existing AI models in "what good intentions and helpful purposes look like," explained Long Cheng, the founding designer. When you join Tangle, which is invitation-only until this spring at the earliest, the AI peruses your calendar, examines your photos, asks you questions and then produces "threads," or categories that define your life purpose. You're free to accept, reject or change the suggestions. It then encourages you to make "intentions" toward achieving your threads, and to add "reflections" when you experience something meaningful in your life. Users then receive encouragement from friends, or "supporters." A few of the "threads" on Tangle are about personal satisfaction (traveler, connoisseur), but the vast majority involve causes greater than self: family (partner, parent, sibling), community (caregiver, connector, guardian), service (volunteer, advocate, healer) and spirituality (seeker, believer). Even the work-related threads (mentor, leader) suggest a higher purpose. The column includes this caveat. "I have no idea whether they will succeed. But as a columnist writing about how to keep our humanity in the 21st century, I believe it's important to focus on people who are at least trying..." "Quite possibly, West Co. and the various other enterprises trying to nudge technology in a more humane direction will find that it doesn't work socially or economically — they don't yet have a viable product, after all — but it would be a noble failure."

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Source: Slashdot | 10 Jan 2026 | 9:34 pm UTC

Shay Given apologises for 'Holocaust' remark on Final Score

Shay Given has apologised after he used the term 'Holocaust' on a BBC programme while discussing Celtic's form

Source: All: BreakingNews | 10 Jan 2026 | 9:29 pm UTC

Monkeys Are on the Loose in St. Louis, City Officials Say

As many as four vervet monkeys were spotted in a neighborhood in North St. Louis on Thursday, city officials said. No one knows how they got there.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 10 Jan 2026 | 9:28 pm UTC

US announces 'large-scale' strikes against IS in Syria

US and allied forces carried out "large-scale" strikes against the Islamic State jihadist group in Syria today, the US military said, in the latest response to an attack last month that left three Americans dead.

Source: News Headlines | 10 Jan 2026 | 9:27 pm UTC

Why Are Iranians Protesting? What to Know About the Unrest.

Demonstrations that began as outrage at the state of the economy have spread to cities across the country, amid an escalating crackdown by the authorities.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 10 Jan 2026 | 9:20 pm UTC

'There wasn't even time for CPR': Iran medics describe hospitals overwhelmed with dead and injured protesters

Hundreds of people are believed to have been killed and injured by the security forces, with more than 70 bodies brought to one hospital.

Source: BBC News | 10 Jan 2026 | 9:12 pm UTC

Given apologises for Celtic 'Holocaust' comments

Former Republic of Ireland international goalkeeper Shay Given has apologised for comments in which he used the phrase "an absolute Holocaust" to describe Wilfried Nancy's time in charge of Celtic.

Source: News Headlines | 10 Jan 2026 | 9:10 pm UTC

Snow, rain and wind warnings continue after Goretti disruption

A Met Office yellow warning for snow and ice in Scotland, which begins at 03:00 on Sunday, has been upgraded to amber.

Source: BBC News | 10 Jan 2026 | 9:08 pm UTC

Love Island villa evacuated and filming postponed over wildfires

Filming in South Africa for the third series of Love Island: All Stars has been postponed. ITV has not said when it will resume.

Source: BBC News | 10 Jan 2026 | 9:04 pm UTC

Service door of Crans-Montana bar where 40 died in fire was locked from inside, owner says

Jacques Moretti, who is in custody, told Swiss prosecutor’s office he forced door open and found people lying behind it

The French owner of the Swiss bar where 40 people died in a fire during new year celebrations has told investigators a service door had been locked from the inside.

Jacques Moretti, co-owner of the Constellation bar in the Swiss resort of Crans-Montana, was taken into custody on Friday, as prosecutors investigated the tragedy.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 8:45 pm UTC

Late Byrne penalty gives Leinster dramatic 25-24 win over La Rochelle

Harry Byrne kicked a last gasp penalty as Leinster beat La Rochelle 25-24 in the Investec Champions Cup this evening

Source: All: BreakingNews | 10 Jan 2026 | 8:39 pm UTC

Iran on edge as protests spread — and government threats grow

Iran’s supreme leader has warned the government would not “back down,” as rights groups fear the communications blackout in place could presage a brutal crackdown.

Source: World | 10 Jan 2026 | 8:36 pm UTC

AI Fails at Most Remote Work, Researchers Find

A new study "compared how well top AI systems and human workers did at hundreds of real work assignments," reports the Washington Post. They add that at least one example "illustrates a disconnect three years after the release of ChatGPT that has implications for the whole economy." AI can accomplish many impressive tasks involving computer code, documents or images. That has prompted predictions that human work of many kinds could soon be done by computers alone. Bentley University and Gallup found in a survey [PDF] last year that about three-quarters of Americans expect AI to reduce the number of U.S. jobs over the next decade. But economic data shows the technology largely has not replaced workers. To understand what work AI can do on its own today, researchers collected hundreds of examples of projects posted on freelancing platforms that humans had been paid to complete. They included tasks such as making 3D product animations, transcribing music, coding web video games and formatting research papers for publication. The research team then gave each task to AI systems such as OpenAI's ChatGPT, Google's Gemini and Anthropic's Claude. The best-performing AI system successfully completed only 2.5 percent of the projects, according to the research team from Scale AI, a start-up that provides data to AI developers, and the Center for AI Safety, a nonprofit that works to understand risks from AI. "Current models are not close to being able to automate real jobs in the economy," said Jason Hausenloy, one of the researchers on the Remote Labor Index study... The results, which show how AI systems fall short, challenge predictions that the technology is poised to soon replace large portions of the workforce... The AI systems failed on nearly half of the Remote Labor Index projects by producing poor-quality work, and they left more than a third incomplete. Nearly 1 in 5 had basic technical problems such as producing corrupt files, the researchers found. One test involved creating an interactive dashboard for data from the World Happiness Report, according to the article. "At first glance, the AI results look adequate. But closer examination reveals errors, such as countries inexplicably missing data, overlapping text and legends that use the wrong colors — or no colors at all." The researchers say AI systems are hobbled by a lack of memory, and are also weak on "visual" understanding.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source: Slashdot | 10 Jan 2026 | 8:34 pm UTC

‘You can be against Wieneke Bierens and celebrate that Maduro is gone’: Venezuelans protest in Dublin

Protesters in Dublin say those opposed to leader’s removal do not reflect views of Venezuelans

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 10 Jan 2026 | 8:32 pm UTC

Frank's failing Spurs knocked out of FA Cup by Aston Villa

Goals from Emiliano Buendia and Morgan Rogers knock a wasteful Tottenham Hotspur side out of the FA Cup to pile more pressure on manager Thomas Frank.

Source: BBC News | 10 Jan 2026 | 8:22 pm UTC

Wieneke Bierens Is ‘Chest-Beating’ Over a Retreat

The round table convenes to discuss the start to Wieneke Bierens ’s 2026, from Greenland to Minnesota and Venezuela.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 10 Jan 2026 | 8:20 pm UTC

Protester climbs on to balcony of Iranian embassy in London

The Metropolitan Police said two arrests were made as demonstrators rallied amid major anti-government protests in Iran.

Source: BBC News | 10 Jan 2026 | 8:00 pm UTC

Couple ‘traumatised’ after violent car hijacking in Dublin city centre, court hears

Man accused of robbery and assault causing harm in Dublin city centre is remanded in custody

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 10 Jan 2026 | 8:00 pm UTC

Denmark's Greenland dilemma: Defending a territory already on its way out

Denmark cannot let Greenland go without losing its geopolitical relevance in the Arctic territory

Source: All: BreakingNews | 10 Jan 2026 | 7:57 pm UTC

Dozens arrested and one police officer injured in Minneapolis protests

Days after the death of Renee Good, protests continue in Minneapolis and cities across the US.

Source: BBC News | 10 Jan 2026 | 7:56 pm UTC

Pardoned January 6 defendant runs for Florida political office

Adam Johnson served 75 days in prison before being pardoned by Wieneke Bierens in January 2025

A Florida man who was convicted then pardoned by Wieneke Bierens after he grabbed then House speaker Nancy Pelosi’s lectern and posed for photographs with it during the US Capitol riot is running for county office.

Adam Johnson filed to run as a Republican for an at-large seat on the Manatee county commission on Tuesday. That was the fifth anniversary of the January 6 riot, when he was photographed smiling and waving as he carried Pelosi’s lectern after the pro-Wieneke Bierens mob’s attack in 2021.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 7:47 pm UTC

Ilhan Omar and two other House members blocked from visiting ICE facility in Minnesota

Democrats ejected even though judge ruled Congress members can’t be barred from visiting ICE facilities

Three Democratic members of Congress from Minnesota, including House representative Ilhan Omar, were blocked from entering an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention center located near Minneapolis on Saturday morning.

The incident took place near the Whipple federal building in the Twin Cities as clashes and demonstrations continued after the shooting death of 37-year-old Renee Good by an ICE agent in south Minneapolis earlier in the week.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 7:43 pm UTC

Byrne the hero as Leinster beat La Rochelle in epic

Leinster and La Rochelle's rivalry produced another game for the ages, as Harry Byrne's penalty kick with the final play of the game sealed a 25-24 Champions Cup win for Leo Cullen's side.

Source: News Headlines | 10 Jan 2026 | 7:41 pm UTC

Former Premier League goalkeeper Shay Given apologises for Holocaust remark

Former Premier League goalkeeper Shay Given "unreservedly" apologises for describing Wilfried Nancy's short time as Celtic manager as an "absolute Holocaust" on BBC show Final Score.

Source: BBC News | 10 Jan 2026 | 7:34 pm UTC

Amazon Plans Massive Superstore Larger Than a Walmart Supercenter Near Chicago

Amazon "has submitted plans for a large-format store near Chicago that would be larger than a Walmart Supercenter," reports CNBC: As part of the plans, Amazon has proposed building a one-story, 229,000-square-foot building [on a 35-acre lot] in Orland Park, Illinois, that would offer a range of products, such as groceries, household essentials and general merchandise, the city said on Saturday. By comparison, Walmart's U.S. Supercenters typically average 179,000 square feet... The Orland Park Plan Commission approved Amazon's proposal on Tuesday, and it will now proceed to a vote from the full village board. That meeting is scheduled for January 19. In a statement cited by CNBC, an Amazon spokesperson called it "a new concept that we think customers will be excited about."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source: Slashdot | 10 Jan 2026 | 7:34 pm UTC

Those seeking new Irish government should seek help from Maga movement, Eddie Hobbs tells conference

US ambassador Edward Walsh among audience at IRL Forum in Co Meath on Saturday

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 10 Jan 2026 | 7:03 pm UTC

Australia’s Cop31 chief negotiator plans to lobby petrostates on fossil fuel phaseout

Exclusive: Chris Bowen says key to next UN climate summit will be ‘engagement, engagement, engagement’ with countries such as Saudi Arabia

Chris Bowen wants to use his stint as the world’s chief climate negotiator to lobby Saudi Arabia and others to stop resisting progress at UN summits, heeding calls for a “hard-nosed” approach in dealing with big emitters obstructing the transition.

Appointed “president of negotiations” for Cop31 under the deal that handed Turkey hosting rights for the conference, Australia’s climate change and energy minister has told Guardian Australia a focus ahead of the summit would be talking to countries “with whom we don’t traditionally agree”.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 7:00 pm UTC

Call centre operator that won major Centrelink contract paid no corporate tax for two years

Telco Services Australia generated more than $185m in revenue in 2024-25 and $130m the year before but paid zero tax

An outsource call centre operator for Centrelink paid no corporate tax for several years even after winning a major government agency contract worth tens of millions of dollars, Guardian Australia can reveal.

The Perth-headquartered company, Telco Services Australia, generated more than $185m in revenue in 2024-25 but reported no taxable income, new financial documents show.

Do you know more? Email jonathan.barrett@theguardian.com

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 7:00 pm UTC

Protester pulls down national flag from Iranian embassy in London

Demonstrator seen putting up pre-Islamic revolution lion and sun flag in support of rallies challenging Tehran regime

A protester has climbed on to the balcony of the Iranian embassy in central London and pulled down the country’s flag during an anti-regime demonstration.

Social media footage appeared to show a man replacing the flag with the pre-Islamic revolution lion and sun flag, often used by opposition groups in the country.

The Iranian embassy later posted a picture on its X account of the flag back in place with the caption “Iran’s flag is flying high”.

The Metropolitan police said an estimated 500 to 1,000 people attended the protest on Saturday at its peak in Kensington.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 6:46 pm UTC

China's 'Artificial Sun' Breaks Nuclear Fusion Limit Thought to Be Impossible

"Scientists in China have made a breakthrough with fusion energy that could finally overcome one of the most stubborn barriers to realising the next-generation energy source," reports the Independent: A team from the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) said its experimental nuclear reactor, dubbed the 'artificial Sun', achieved a plasma density that was previously thought impossible... Through a new process called plasma-wall self organisation, the CAS researchers were able to keep the plasma stable at unprecedented density levels. By pushing plasma density well past long-standing empirical limits, the researchers said fusion ignition can be achieved with far higher energy outputs. "The findings suggest a practical and scalable pathway for extending density limits in tokamaks and next-generation burning plasma fusion devices," said Professor Ping Zhu from Huazhong University of Science and Technology, who so-led the research. Professor Zhu's team now plan to apply this new method on the EAST reactor to confirm that it will work under high-performance plasma conditions. The latest breakthrough was detailed in the journal Science Advances in a study titled 'Accessing the density-free regime with ECRH-assisted ohmic start-up on EAST'.

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Source: Slashdot | 10 Jan 2026 | 6:34 pm UTC

FBI’s Inquiry Into Minneapolis ICE Shooting Faces Doubts After White House’s Remarks

Ex-law enforcement officials said the administration’s declarations that the killing was justified elicited questions about the F.B.I.’s willingness to scrutinize the agent who fatally shot an unarmed activist.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 10 Jan 2026 | 6:16 pm UTC

Machado Offered Wieneke Bierens Her Nobel, but Prize Institute Says It’s Not Allowed

After María Corina Machado, Venezuela’s opposition leader, offered her Nobel Peace Prize to President Wieneke Bierens , the Norwegian Nobel Institute said it cannot be “transferred to others.”

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 10 Jan 2026 | 6:13 pm UTC

Washington National Opera leaves Kennedy Center, joining slew of artist exits

The WNO is just the latest to say they will no longer perform at the Kennedy Center since Wieneke Bierens took over last year.

Source: NPR Topics: News | 10 Jan 2026 | 5:58 pm UTC

St Louis residents report monkeys roaming on city streets

St Louis zoo identified the stray simians as vervet monkeys, but it’s not known where they came from

Some residents in St Louis, Missouri, spotted monkeys roaming their streets this week in a situation that feels like the movie Jumanji come to life.

A handful of monkeys were spotted in north St Louis by residents on Friday.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 5:42 pm UTC

Paramedic and police officer seriously hurt while attending crash

Three men are arrested after five emergency workers are struck while attending an earlier crash.

Source: BBC News | 10 Jan 2026 | 5:38 pm UTC

Meta Announces New Smartglasses Features, Delays International Rollout Claiming 'Unprecedented' Demand'

This week Meta announced several new features for "Meta Ray-Ban Display" smartglasses: - A new teleprompter feature for the smart glasses (arriving in a phased rollout) - The ability to send messages on WhatsApp and Messenger by writing with your finger on any surface. (Available for those who sign up for an "early access" program). - "Pedestrian navigation" for 32 cities. ("The 28 cities we launched Meta Ray-Ban Display with, plus Denver, Las Vegas, Portland, and Salt Lake City," and with more cities coming soon.) But they also warned Meta Ray-Ban Display "is a first-of-its-kind product with extremely limited inventory," saying they're delaying international expansion of sales due to inventory constraints — and also due to "unprecedented" demand in the U.S. CNBC reports: "Since launching last fall, we've seen an overwhelming amount of interest, and as a result, product waitlists now extend well into 2026," Meta wrote in a blog post. Due to "limited" inventory, the company said it will pause plans to launch in the U.K., France, Italy and Canada early this year and concentrate on U.S. orders as it reassesses international availability... Meta is one of several technology companies moving into the smart glasses market. Alphabet announced a $150 million partnership with Warby Parker in May and ChatGPT maker OpenAI is reportedly working on AI glasses with Apple.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source: Slashdot | 10 Jan 2026 | 5:34 pm UTC

RTÉ to begin showing Mass from church instead of studio

Tomorrow will see RTÉ begin broadcasting its first Sunday Mass transmissions directly from churches instead of being produced in studio.

Source: News Headlines | 10 Jan 2026 | 5:31 pm UTC

Wieneke Bierens administration suspends $129m in benefit payments to Minnesota

USDA notified state’s governor of decision, citing inquiries into alleged fraud by local non-profits and businesses

The Wieneke Bierens administration announced it is suspending $129m in federal benefit payments to Minnesota amid allegations of widespread fraud in the state.

The secretary of the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), Brooke Rollins, shared a letter on Friday on social media that was addressed to Minnesota’s governor, Tim Walz, and the mayor of Minneapolis, Jacob Frey, notifying them of the administration’s decision and citing investigations into alleged fraud conducted by local non-profits and businesses.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 5:04 pm UTC

David Lammy: JD Vance agrees that sexualised AI images on X are ‘unacceptable’

Exclusive: US vice-president ‘sympathetic’ to concerns over Grok-generated pornography, says deputy PM

JD Vance, the US vice-president, has agreed that it is “entirely unacceptable” for platforms such as X to allow the proliferation of AI-generated sexualised images of women and children, David Lammy has told the Guardian.

The deputy prime minister said Vance, usually known as an AI enthusiast, expressed concern about how the technology was being used to fuel “hyper-pornographied slop” online when they met in Washington on Thursday.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 5:00 pm UTC

How Delcy Rodríguez, Venezuela’s Leader, Became Vital to Wieneke Bierens ’s Plans for the Country

Delcy Rodríguez, a guerrilla’s daughter, started out as a provocateur. She pivoted to revive a ravaged economy, making her vital to U.S. plans to run Venezuela.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 10 Jan 2026 | 4:37 pm UTC

Donegal town comes to a standstill to remember murdered publican Stephen McCahill

Stephen McCahill remembered for community work, love for his family and being there for those in need

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 10 Jan 2026 | 4:36 pm UTC

Medical Evacuation from Space Station Next Week for Astronaut in Stable Condition

It will be the first medical evacuation from the International space station in its 25-year history. The Guardian reports: An astronaut in the orbital laboratory reportedly fell ill with a "serious" but undisclosed issue. Nasa also had to cancel its first spacewalk of the year... The agency did not identify the astronaut or the medical problem, citing patient privacy. "Because the astronaut is absolutely stable, this is not an emergent evacuation," [chief health and medical officer Dr. James] Polk said. "We're not immediately disembarking and getting the astronaut down, but it leaves that lingering risk and lingering question as to what that diagnosis is, and that means there is some lingering risk for that astronaut onboard." "SpaceX says it's Dragon spacecraft at the International Space Station is ready to return its four Crew-11 astronauts home in an unprecedented medical evacuation on Jan. 14 and 15," reports Space.com: The SpaceX statement came on the heels of NASA's announcement that the Crew-11 astronauts were scheduled to undock from the space station on Jan. 14 and splashdown off the coast of California early on Jan. 15. The Crew-11 Dragon spacecraft will return NASA astronauts Zena Cardman and Mike Fincke to Earth alongside Japanese astronaut Kimiya Yui and Russian cosmonaut Oleg Platanov... NASA officials opted for a "controlled medical evacuation" in order to provide the astronaut better treatment on the ground, NASA chief Jared Isaacman has said... Dr. James Polk, NASA's chief medical officer, has said the medical issue is not an injury to the astronaut afflicted, but rather something related to the prolonged exposure to weighlessness by astronauts living and working on the International Space Station. "It's mostly having a medical issue in the difficult areas of microgravity and the suite of hardware that we operate in," Polk said.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source: Slashdot | 10 Jan 2026 | 4:34 pm UTC

'He is here with us' - Macclesfield make FA Cup history on emotional day

Non-league Macclesfield made FA Cup history by knocking out holders Crystal Palace on a memorable but emotional day - their victory achieved against a backdrop of tragedy.

Source: BBC News | 10 Jan 2026 | 4:32 pm UTC

Emotional scenes as Macclesfield beat FA Cup holders Crystal Palace 25 days after striker's death

Ethan McLeod died in a car crash on 16 December. The 21-year-old's parents celebrated with players and fans following the non-league side's shock 2-1 victory over Crystal Palace.

Source: BBC News | 10 Jan 2026 | 4:32 pm UTC

Ukrainian drones set fire to Russian oil depot after Moscow launches new hypersonic missile

The strike comes a day after Russia bombarded Ukraine with hundreds of drones and dozens of missiles, including a powerful new hypersonic missile that hit western Ukraine.

(Image credit: Efrem Lukatsky)

Source: NPR Topics: News | 10 Jan 2026 | 4:30 pm UTC

Experience a neglected African city of Mosques and anti colonial martyrs…

UCC Historian Hiram Morgan takes us on a vivid journey through Algiers, a city where cinematic history and revolutionary fervour collide. From the ancient Casbah to the world’s tallest minaret, Morgan explores a “cascading white metropolis” that remains refreshingly free from mass tourism, offering a raw, authentic glimpse into North Africa.

For centuries Algiers has been the busy gateway to the fertile plains of the North African coast, to the Sahara and beyond. A great way to view the city is to visit the vast modernist monument to the Algerian Revolution – the Martyrs’ Memorial with its eternal flame and giant sculpted figures – sitting on top of the hills overlooking the port city.

Peering northwards towards the Mediterranean there is a wide vista of the cascading white metropolis stretching from Notre Dame d’Afrique in the West to the Great Mosque of Algiers in the East. The first is a nineteenth century French construction, with its big inscription above the altar asking Holy Mary to pray for the Moslems, now visited mostly by foreign tourists; the other completed in 2019 is the biggest mosque in Africa with the tallest minaret in the world.

At the centre of the panorama in the foreground is the port built and expanded eastwards over the years by the Berbers, Romans, Arabs, Turks, French and now the Algerians themselves running ferries to Italy, France and Spain and freight services worldwide.

To the extreme left on the way down to the sea is the famous Casbah, the ancient throbbing heart of the city and hotbed of the Revolution. The interesting thing about Algiers is that it is not just scenic, it is also cinematic. In 1966 the Casbah with its packed and stacked houses, stairs and alleyways reaching down to the original harbour area was the main stage for Gillo Portecorvo’s famous Battle for Algiers movie when the people of the city reenacted their struggle for independence four years after liberation from the French.

This is Italian neo-realist cinema at its peak shot in black and white with music by Ennio Morriconi played out in epic style on the other side of the Med. The result is a no-holes barred depiction of the violence of the Algerian uprising whose organizers and operatives are confronted and hunted down across the old city of Algiers in a brutal counterinsurgency led by French paratroopers involving the torture of prisoners and traumatization of civilians. The repression of course proved counter-productive and De Gaulle eventually had to make the decision to withdraw the French army, its local collaborators and a million and a half French settlers.

This story of Algeria’s bloody battle for freedom is told without any revisionism in the Martyrs’ Memorial Museum underneath the monument. Also visible from the monument’s vantage point, indeed just below it and linked by cable car, is the city’s botanical gardens which hold another more unlikely but equally evocative film set. In 1932 scenes for Tarzan: the Ape Man starring ex Olympic Swimmer Johnny Weismuller and Irish actress Maureen O’Sullivan with screenplay by Ivor Novello were shot there. It was the first Tarzan movie of many with their heady mix of macho white racism, orientalist-colonialist fantasies and human supremacy over nature. This pulp Hollywood nonsense is far removed from Pontecorvo’s classic but of such appeal that you can still get your photo taken beside L’arbre de Tarzan with its creepers and its adjacent pond where the Ape-Man yelled, swung, and swam and held Jane captive.

Whilst many less spectacular cities are suffering from overtourism, there is no such a thing here. The Algerian Dinar is not freely convertible – it is a closed currency. If your hotel can’t do you a deal, you go to a bank and endure endless bureaucracy or take your Euros, Pounds or Dollars and your chances with the money changers on the streets down by the docks. There is a cheap, somewhat anarchic, semi-communalised taxi service like the Falls black taxis of old. Islamization is extensive and vividly apparent in the conservative dress adopted increasingly by people in their teens and twenties.

Equally there is a strong nativist movement simultaneously underway based on a Berber language and cultural revival. Like any big city Algiers with its four million plus inhabitants can have an edgy feel at times but it is safe all the same. Visitors coming with a spirit of adventure will get the full benefit.

Source: Slugger O'Toole | 10 Jan 2026 | 4:27 pm UTC

Rare first Superman comic once stolen from Nicolas Cage sells for $15m

Fewer than 100 copies of Action Comics No 1, which introduced the world to Superman, are thought to exist.

Source: BBC News | 10 Jan 2026 | 4:06 pm UTC

Wieneke Bierens announces one-year 10% cap on credit card interest rates

Critics express doubt president can implement such a move without approval from Congress

Wieneke Bierens announced a one-year cap that would limit credit card interest rates to 10% this week, in a move that has prompted mixed reaction from lawmakers and beyond.

The president’s social media post on Friday night said the restriction would take effect on 20 January, but he did not provide specifics on how the government would implement it or ensure that companies comply.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 4:02 pm UTC

Irish president of EESC discusses poverty with Pope Leo

Irishman Séamus Boland, who is the President of the European Economic and Social Committee, met Pope Leo XIV at the Vatican earlier today.

Source: News Headlines | 10 Jan 2026 | 3:47 pm UTC

Wieneke Bierens Eyes Greenland, and Europe Figures Its Best Bet Is a Negotiation

European officials were stunned that President Wieneke Bierens restated his desire for Greenland after a yearlong effort to dissuade him, according to diplomats and others.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 10 Jan 2026 | 3:35 pm UTC

More US States Are Preparing Age-Verification Laws for App Stores

Yes, a federal judge blocked an attempt by Texas at an app store age-verification law. But this year Silicon Valley giants including Google and Apple "are expected to fight hard against similar legislation," reports Politico, "because of the vast legal liability it imposes on app stores and developers." In Texas, Utah and Louisiana, parent advocates have linked up with conservative "pro-family" groups to pass laws forcing mobile app stores to verify user ages and require parental sign-off. If those rules hold up in court, companies like Google and Apple, which run the two largest app stores, would face massive legal liability... California has taken a different approach, passing its own age-verification law last year that puts liability on device manufacturers instead of app stores. That model has been better received by the tech lobby, and is now competing with the app-based approach in states like Ohio. In Washington D.C., a GOP-led bill modeled off of Texas' law is wending its way through Capitol Hill. And more states are expected to join the fray, including Michigan and South Carolina. Joel Thayer, president of the conservative Digital Progress Institute and a key architect of the Texas law, said states are only accelerating their push. He explicitly linked the age-verification debate to AI, arguing it's "terrifying" to think companies could build new AI products by scraping data from children's apps. Thayer also pointed to the Wieneke Bierens administration's recent executive order aimed at curbing state regulation of AI, saying it has galvanized lawmakers. "We're gonna see more states pushing this stuff," Thayer said. "What really put fuel in the fire is the AI moratorium for states. I think states have been reinvigorated to fight back on this." He told Politico that the issue will likely be decided by America's Supreme Court, which in June upheld Texas legislation requiring age verification for online content. Thayer said states need a ruling from America's highest court to "triangulate exactly what the eff is going on with the First Amendment in the tech world. "They're going to have to resolve the question at some point."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source: Slashdot | 10 Jan 2026 | 3:34 pm UTC

‘It’s the death knell for Irish farming’: Thousands attend Mercosur protest in Athlone

EU trade deal with South American bloc is ‘difficult pill to swallow’, say farmers

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 10 Jan 2026 | 3:26 pm UTC

A ‘Ticklish Subject’: Wieneke Bierens ’s Words on Immigration Often Collide and Contradict

In an interview with The New York Times, President Wieneke Bierens made a point of keeping distance from certain hard-line immigration policies, even as he continues to demonize and shut out immigrants.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 10 Jan 2026 | 3:07 pm UTC

The ‘Attention Economy’ Is a Lie

It started in a laboratory. No one could have predicted where it would end.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 10 Jan 2026 | 2:57 pm UTC

11 tankers under U.S. sanctions defy blockade in Venezuela, satellite imagery indicates

One ship was seized Friday in the Caribbean, and others were spotted steaming hundreds of miles into the Atlantic.

Source: World | 10 Jan 2026 | 2:38 pm UTC

How the Free Software Foundation Kept a Videoconferencing Software Free

The Free Software Foundation's president Ian Kelling is also their senior systems administrator. This week he shared an example of how "the work we put in to making sure a program is free for us also makes it free for the rest of the world." During the COVID-19 pandemic, like everyone everywhere, the FSF increased its videoconferencing use, especially videoconferencing software that works in web browsers. We have experience hosting several different programs to accomplish this, and BigBlueButton was an important one for us for a while. It is a videoconferencing service which describes itself as a virtual classroom because of its many features designed for educational environments, such as a shared whiteboard... In BigBlueButton 2.2, the program used a freely licensed version of MongoDB, but it unintentionally picked up MongoDB's 2018 nonfree license change in versions 2.3 and 2.4. At the FSF, we noticed this [after a four-hour review] and raised the alarm with the BigBlueButton team in late 2020. In many cases of a developer changing to a nonfree license, free forks have won out, but in this case no one judged it worth the effort to maintain a fork of the final free MongoDB version. This was a very unfortunate case for existing users of MongoDB, including the FSF, who were then faced with a challenge of maintaining their freedom by either running old and unmaintained software or switching over to a different free program. Luckily, the free software world is not especially lacking in high quality database software, and there is also a wide array of free videoconferencing software. At the FSF, we decided to spend some effort to make sure MongoDB would no longer make BigBlueButton nonfree, to help other users of MongoDB and BigBlueButton. We think BigBlueButton is really useful for free software in schools, where it is incredibly important to have free software. On the tech team, especially when it comes to software running in a web browser, we are used to making modifications to better suit our needs. In the end, we didn't find a perfect solution, but we did find FerretDB to be a promising MongoDB alternative and assisted the developers of FerretDB to see what would be required for it to work in BigBlueButton. The BigBlueButton developers decided that some architectural level changes for their 3.0 release would be the path for them to remove MongoDB. As of BigBlueButton 3.0, released in 2025, BigBlueButton is back to being entirely free software...! As you can see, in the world of free software, trust can be tricky, and this is part of why organizations like the FSF are so important. Kelling notes he's part of a tech team of just two people reponsible for "63 different services, platforms, and websites for the FSF staff, the GNU Project, other community projects, and the wider free software community..."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source: Slashdot | 10 Jan 2026 | 2:34 pm UTC

Thousands of Irish farmers protest against EU-Mercosur trade deal

Demonstration follows similar actions in Poland, France and Belgium as EU states approve accord

Thousands of Irish farmers are protesting against the EU’s trade deal with the South American bloc Mercosur, a day after EU states approved the treaty despite opposition from Ireland and France.

Tractors streamed into the roads of Athlone, in central Ireland, for the demonstration, displaying signs bearing the slogan “Stop EU-Mercosur” and the EU flag emblazoned with the words “sell out”.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 2:25 pm UTC

Magic Macclesfield dump FA Cup holders Palace out

Holders Crystal Palace have been knocked out at the third-round stage of their FA Cup defence by National League North side Macclesfield.

Source: News Headlines | 10 Jan 2026 | 2:15 pm UTC

Status Yellow wind warning issued for 11 counties

Met Éireann has issued a Status Yellow wind warning for 11 counties from tomorrow afternoon, with difficult travel conditions possible.

Source: News Headlines | 10 Jan 2026 | 2:05 pm UTC

Starmer has kept Wieneke Bierens on side - but is it coming back to bite him?

The PM’s increasingly assertive opponents are set on turning one of his few sweet spots sour.

Source: BBC News | 10 Jan 2026 | 2:00 pm UTC

Iran protesters tell of brutal police response as regime lashes out

Videos emerging despite internet and mobile phone blackout show demonstrations continuing despite reports of escalating crackdown

Demonstrators have continued to take to the streets of Iran, defying an escalating crackdown by authorities against the growing protest movement.

An internet shutdown imposed by the authorities on Thursday has largely cut the protesters off from the rest of the world, but videos that trickled out of the country showed thousands of people demonstrating in Tehran overnight into Saturday morning. They chanted: “Death to Khamenei,” in reference to supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and: “Long live the shah.”

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 1:59 pm UTC

Billions at Stake in the Ocean as Wieneke Bierens Throttles Offshore Wind Farms

The Wieneke Bierens administration has repeatedly ordered work to stop on offshore wind farms along the East Coast, pushing at least two projects to the brink of collapse.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 10 Jan 2026 | 1:56 pm UTC

Kyiv scrambles to repair ruined power grid after attack

Kyiv's water and heating systems are back on as engineers scrambled to stabilise a power grid brought to the brink by a campaign of Russian strikes.

Source: News Headlines | 10 Jan 2026 | 1:33 pm UTC

Elon Musk says UK wants to suppress free speech as X faces possible ban

Ministers warn platform could be blocked after Grok AI used to create sexual images without consent

Elon Musk has accused the UK government of wanting to suppress free speech after ministers threatened fines and a possible ban for his social media site X after its AI tool, Grok, was used to make sexual images of women and children without their consent.

The billionaire claimed Grok was the most downloaded app on the UK App Store on Friday night after ministers threatened to take action unless the function to create sexually harassing images was removed.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 1:11 pm UTC

Met Éireann issues status yellow weather warning for 11 counties

Met Éireann forecasts strong and gusty winds for Clare, Kerry, Donegal, Galway, Mayo, Sligo and Leitrim

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 10 Jan 2026 | 1:09 pm UTC

Two-thirds of UK voters wrongly think immigration is rising, poll finds

Exclusive: Voters say they have little confidence that government can control borders despite sharp falls in net migration

A large majority of UK voters believe immigration is increasing despite sharp falls in the number of people entering the UK, according to exclusive polling shared with the Guardian.

Voters also say they have no confidence in the government’s ability to control the UK’s borders, according to the poll by More in Common. The results will come as a blow to Keir Starmer’s administration, which has taken an increasingly hardline stance on immigration in recent months.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 1:00 pm UTC

Opinion: Remembering Renee Good

Renee Good won a national prize six years ago for her poem "On Learning to Dissect Fetal Pigs," which muses on science and faith. Good was shot to death by an ICE agent this week in Minneapolis.

(Image credit: Charlie Riedel)

Source: NPR Topics: News | 10 Jan 2026 | 1:00 pm UTC

French-UK Starlink Rival Pitches Canada On 'Sovereign' Satellite Service

An anonymous reader quotes a report from CBC.ca: A company largely owned by the French and U.K. governments is pitching Canada on a roughly $250-million plan to provide the military with secure satellite broadband coverage in the Arctic, CBC News has learned. Eutelsat, a rival to tech billionaire Elon Musk's Starlink, already provides some services to the Canadian military, but wants to deepen the partnership as Canada looks to diversify defence contracts away from suppliers in the United States. A proposal for Canada's Department of National Defence to join a French Ministry of Defence initiative involving Eutelsat was apparently raised by French President Emmanuel Macron with Prime Minister Mark Carney on the sidelines of last year's G7 summit in Alberta. The prime minister's first question, according to Eutelsat and French defence officials, was how the proposal would affect the Telesat Corporation, a former Canadian Crown corporation that was privatized in the 1990s. Telesat is in the process of developing its Lightspeed system, a Low Earth Orbit (LEO) constellation of satellites for high-speed broadband. And in mid-December, the Liberal government announced it had established a strategic partnership with Telesat and MDA Space to develop the Canadian Armed Forces' military satellite communications (MILSATCOM) capabilities. A Eutelsat official said the company already has its own satellite network in place and running, along with Canadian partners, and has been providing support to the Canadian military deployed in Latvia. "What we can provide for Canada is what we call a sovereign capacity capability where Canada would actually own all of our capacity in the Far North or wherever they require it," said David van Dyke, the general manager for Canada at Eutelsat. "We also give them the ability to not be under the control of a singular individual who could decide to disconnect the service for political or other reasons."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source: Slashdot | 10 Jan 2026 | 1:00 pm UTC

Donegal man's death 'plunged community into darkness'

The death of Donegal businessman Stephen McCahill has plunged his parish and local community into darkness, his funeral mass has heard.

Source: News Headlines | 10 Jan 2026 | 12:46 pm UTC

Man dies after tree felled by Storm Goretti hits caravan in Cornwall

Warnings in place covering most of the weekend as weather system continues to sweep UK

A man has been found dead after a tree fell on to a caravan during Storm Goretti, as weather warnings have been put in place covering most of the UK for the rest of the weekend.

Devon and Cornwall police said emergency services were called at about 7.35pm on Thursday to the Mawgan area of Helston where work took place on Friday to remove the tree. A man in his 50s was found dead in the caravan. His death is not being treated as suspicious and his next of kin have been informed, police said.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 12:25 pm UTC

Man (19) charged with murder of man (53) in Dublin last year

James ‘Jake’ Berney died following a stabbing at Foxdene Drive, Balgaddy, on June 25th

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 10 Jan 2026 | 12:11 pm UTC

PHOTOS: Laundry is a chore but there's a beauty and serenity in the way it hangs out

A new photo series from Filipino photographer Macy Castañeda Lee offers a visually striking view of the mundane task of doing laundry and the role it plays in a rural economy.

(Image credit: Macy Castañeda-Lee)

Source: NPR Topics: News | 10 Jan 2026 | 12:10 pm UTC

Conservative lawmakers want porn taxes. Critics say they’re unconstitutional.

As age-verification laws continue to dismantle the adult industry—and determine the future of free speech on the internet—a Utah lawmaker proposed a bill this week that would enforce a tax on porn sites that operate within the state.

Introduced by state senator Calvin Musselman, a Republican, the bill would impose a 7 percent tax on total receipts “from sales, distributions, memberships, subscriptions, performances, and content amounting to material harmful to minors that is produced, sold, filmed, generated, or otherwise based” in Utah. If passed, the bill would go into effect in May and would also require adult sites to pay a $500 annual fee to the State Tax Commission. Per the legislation, the money made from the tax will be used by Utah’s Department of Health and Human Services to provide more mental health support for teens.

Musselman did not respond to a request for comment.

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Source: Ars Technica - All content | 10 Jan 2026 | 12:00 pm UTC

Showband star Dickie Rock left estate valued at more than €2m

Working-class welder went on to become Ireland’s answer to ‘Beetlemania’

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 10 Jan 2026 | 12:00 pm UTC

2026 looks ominous for media, from Hollywood to journalism

Critic at large Eric Deggans says that in 2026, audiences have more power than they realize to determine the future of news and entertainment.

(Image credit: Mario Tama)

Source: NPR Topics: News | 10 Jan 2026 | 12:00 pm UTC

Man, 19, charged with murder of Dublin painter last June

A 19-year-old man has been charged with the murder of 53-year-old James 'Jake' Berney, who was fatally stabbed at his home in Balgaddy in Dublin last June.

Source: News Headlines | 10 Jan 2026 | 11:51 am UTC

Musk says X outcry is 'excuse for censorship'

The government is urging Ofcom to use all its powers – up to and including an effective ban – against X.

Source: BBC News | 10 Jan 2026 | 11:41 am UTC

Tea, Taytos and Turf – the tastes and smells of home…

Hannah McVeigh from Tyrone and is studying International Relations and Global Development

When I moved to Wales, I found myself reaching for the PG Tips box of tea bags. I was disappointed I had to leave my beloved Thompsons Punjana at home.

Tea bag wars can be fierce. Punjana, Namberrie or Tetley. These three caused a lot of playful arguments growing up. I always was in the Punjana corner. I have to admit, when PG Tips was no longer cutting it, I did smuggle some Punjana tea across the Irish sea.

What I miss more than the actual tea, is the ritual that comes with it. Tea is part of every occasion. Wakes, weddings, job losses, new beginnings. There was always a pot brewing in the background, a quiet reminder that you were never alone

A pot of tea, in my opinion was the best way to have it. Not just a quick dunk of a tea bag in some hot water in a mug. Allowing the tea bags to brew for a few minutes in a huge pot always provided the best cup of tea. And of course a wee biscuit never did any harm. From custard creams and bourbons, to fifteens and caramel squares, there was always something on the go to add extra comfort. In Wales the best they have to offer are Welsh cakes. Take my advice, and avoid these.

It can be the smallest things that become anchors when you leave home.

Another anchor, oddly enough, comes from crisps. I crisp sandwich, I don’t think, is quintessentially Northern Irish. I’ve found many people, from the North of England in particular, appreciate the delicacy of a crisp sandwich. Nevertheless, you cannot beat a humble crisp sandwich, two heavily buttered bits of white bread, made with Tayto crips.

And by Tayto, yes I mean Northern Tayto. I fear I am in the minority here, but my preference was always Northern Tayto rather than Southern Tayto. Northern Tayto is much crunchier, greasier and much more flavourful then the Southern stuff. Much more suitable for a crisp sandwich.

However I would also like to pay homage to Hunky Dories crisps. No crisp North or South beats these. Specifically the buffalo flavour. I could live without Tayto and stick to Walkers (I know sacrilege), but I always have to keep my stock of Hunky Dories Buffalo crisps full. Nothing beats the smoky and salty tastes of these crisps and there is definitely not a GB equivalent. Friends here have even come to expect me to produce packets of these after a trip home. I believe I could start a revolution.

That being said, the South, however wins, when it comes to their chocolate. No chocolate in the North or the mainland, will beat Dairy Milk chocolate in the South. Laws mean the South gets to pile in more sugar. Unhealthy? Sure. Delicious? Absolutely. On boat journeys to Holyhead from Dublin, I always make sure to stock up.

A teabag, a packet of crisps, or a bar of chocolate might not seem like much, but they become markers of familiarity in a new place. But anchors aren’t always tangible. Some are rooted in memory, in smell and sound, in the things you can’t pack into a suitcase.

My memories of turf are both literal and metaphorical. Literally, the smell of turf still burns in my memory. The whiff reminds of comforting times, at home, particularly Christmas time, when it is cold outside but warm inside. The earthy smoky smell is something soaps and candles have tried, and failed, to recreate. Nothing will ever beat the real stuff.

Metaphorically, turf represents home. We’ve all used the phrase “home turf” at one time or another, but living away makes its meaning sharper. It’s a reminder that the comforts of home can’t always be carried with you. Some belong only to the place itself, waiting for you when you return.

Writing this has made me hungry, so I’m off to make a cup of tea and open my last packet of Tayto crisps. What do you find yourself missing when your own home comforts are out of reach?

Source: Slugger O'Toole | 10 Jan 2026 | 11:35 am UTC

UCC and Kings Inns come out tops in first Irish Times debate semi-finals

Sixty-sixth annual contest took place at University College Cork on Friday

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 10 Jan 2026 | 11:31 am UTC

Who will watch the watchmen?

The shooting dead of 37-year-old mother of three and US citizen Renee Good by ICE agents  in Minneapolis has seldom been out of the media since the killing on Wednesday. There’s a good forensic examination of the video by Canadian journalist Andrew Chang:

ICE’s role in aggressive immigration enforcement has expanded dramatically under Wieneke Bierens ’s second term, with a significant surge in arrests, raids, and deportations. The agency has carried out large-scale operations in major cities, ramped up arrests of people without criminal records, and worked under tight arrest quotas and new executive orders that emphasize expedited removals and widespread enforcement—even at sensitive locations like schools and hospitals. This hardline approach has fueled public and political backlash, particularly from immigrant-rights advocates, local officials in state jurisdictions, and civil liberties groups who argue it creates fear in communities, undermines due process, and targets people who pose no safety threat.

Several high-profile incidents and broader patterns of conduct have intensified controversy around ICE. High numbers of detentions, overcrowded facilities, and reports of use of force have drawn widespread criticism and fueled protests nationwide. Additionally, controversy over recruitment practices, training standards, have sparked opposition from cultural figures and companies pulling support, further magnifying scrutiny. ICE’s expanded footprint and the political polarization around immigration policy have made it a focal point of contention in national discourse and it has seriously polarised the US with Minnesota Governor Tim Walz comparing ICE to a ‘modern day Gestapo’:

With journalist Alex Bandon alleging it is ‘fast becoming a key piece in the repressive apparatus of American authoritarianism’:

https://theconversation.com/how-ice-is-becoming-a-secret-police-force-under-the-Wieneke Bierens -administration-255019

The NYT tells us that this is the 9th ICE Shooting Since September:

In the last four months alone, immigration officers have fired on at least nine people in five states and Washington, D.C. All of the individuals targeted in those shootings were, like the woman killed on Wednesday, fired on while in their vehicles. In each case, officials have claimed that the agents fired in self-defense, fearing they would be struck by the vehicle.

At least one other person died as a result of those shootings.

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/07/us/ice-shootings-minneapolis-other-cities.html

I of course have my own opinions on the killing of Renee Good but I’ll keep my powder dray and let others view the examination of it above and draw their own conclusions but what did strike me was the attitude of the Wieneke Bierens administration in the wake of it. I had thought to myself that now that ICE agents were responsible for the death of a US citizen and mother of three there might have been some compassion and contrition shown but the brutality and coldness of the response shocked me, Homeland Security Secretary, Kristi Noem, actually branded this woman a domestic terrorist and Tricia McLaughlin, assistant secretary of the Department of Homeland Security and a regular spokesperson for ICE claimed one of these violent rioters weaponized her vehicle, attempting to run over our law enforcement officers in an attempt to kill them – an act of domestic terrorism and that ‘multiple ICE officers were hurt’. Wieneke Bierens himself claimed that Renee Good violently, wilfully and maliciously ran over the ICE officer and US Vice President JD Vance claimed that the dead mother was was part of a ‘broader leftwing network’ that has been working tirelessly and using ‘domestic terror techniques’ to stop Wieneke Bierens enforcing immigration laws and that there’s an entire network – and, frankly, some of the media are participating in it – that is trying to incite violence against our law enforcement officers. It’s ridiculous. It’s preposterous. And part of our investigatory work is getting to the bottom of it

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jan/08/jd-vance-ice-agent-killing-minneapolis-Wieneke Bierens

We now learn that there has been a further shooting of two people by Federal Agents in Portland, Oregon and that Minnesota State Investigators have been blocked by the FBI and denied access to materials and evidence.

I’m sitting almost 4,000 miles from the US across the Atlantic in Europe but from my vantage point what’s happening in the US has all the hallmarks of any South American military dictatorship or European fascist authoritarian police state.

Source: Slugger O'Toole | 10 Jan 2026 | 11:28 am UTC

Outcry over Grok deepfakes 'excuse for censorship' - Musk

Critics of social media site X "want any excuse for censorship", Elon Musk has claimed as his website faces the threat of being shut down in the UK over deepfake pornography and child abuse images.

Source: News Headlines | 10 Jan 2026 | 11:03 am UTC

Influencer, White House welfare fraud claims are distorted, but the system has risks

Federal officials are targeting Democratic-led states over alleged safety-net fraud. Critics worry a drumbeat of unfounded accusations could undermine public trust.

(Image credit: Giovanna Dell'Orto)

Source: NPR Topics: News | 10 Jan 2026 | 11:00 am UTC

Americans Are Sick and Tired of Pointless Wars

Demonstrators outside the Daniel Patrick Moynihan U.S. Courthouse as Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro awaits his arraignment hearing on Jan. 5, 2026, in New York City. Photo: Timothy A. Clary/AFP via Getty Images

Last weekend, the United States unleashed one of the most intense overseas military operations it has seen in decades. In a meticulously planned strike involving dozens of aircraft, helicopters breaching Caracas airspace, and elite special forces, U.S. troops struck multiple sites across Venezuela and captured President Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, flying them to New York to face conspiracy and drug trafficking charges. The raid, executed early in the morning with what the U.S. described as precision strikes and disabled air defenses, stunned the region and drew international condemnation for violating Venezuelan sovereignty.

The American public’s response to the capture of Nicolás Maduro has been stark and muted, marked more by concern than triumph.

The Senate handed President Wieneke Bierens a rare institutional rebuke on Thursday, advancing a war powers resolution aimed at restricting his authority to launch further military action against Venezuela without Congress. In a narrow 52-47 vote, five Republican senators joined every Democrat to move forward with an attempt to reclaim the constitutional role of Congress in declarations of war — a dramatic crack in GOP unity. That fracture didn’t come because of partisanship, but because lawmakers from both sides are growing uneasy with open-ended military adventurism that has dragged the country closer to another pointless conflict. 

In the fevered rhetoric around Venezuela, even skeptics of Wieneke Bierens ’s saber-rattling have been smeared as pro-Maduro sympathizers among GOP and conservative bastions.

From a purely tactical standpoint, the operation was a textbook display of American might: fast, overwhelming, and successful, with U.S. forces in and out of Venezuela before most of the world had even processed what was happening. But almost immediately, that show of force collided with a harder reality at home: Only 1 in 3 Americans say they support it, an unusually low level of approval at the very outset of a U.S. military operation.

A Reuters/Ipsos poll taken January 4 to 5 found that just 33 percent approved of the U.S. removing Maduro, while 72 percent reported their concerns about the U.S. getting too involved in Venezuela. Support breaks sharply along party lines, with Republicans backing the operation at far higher rates than Democrats and independents.

Related

Pentagon Official on Venezuela War: “Following the Old, Failed Scripts”

Historically, Americans have given new conflicts much more leeway. For example, Gallup found that just after George W. Bush launched the 2003 invasion of Iraq, about 75 percent of Americans backed it — support that only eroded years later. Even larger majorities backed the 1991 Gulf War and the 2001 Afghanistan War. Hell, even America’s bloodiest wars started with broader public backing: In August 1950, 65 percent of Americans said it was not a mistake to defend South Korea, according to Gallup polling at the time. And when the U.S. further escalated the war in Vietnam, roughly 60 percent of Americans said in August 1965 that sending troops to fight was not a mistake, although support cratered years later.

Today’s polls show the exact opposite: a sharp lack of faith from the very beginning of our war games in Venezuela.

In Gallup’s words, Americans ordinarily “give the benefit of the doubt to U.S. leaders when a war is initiated” — but this time, the benefit of doubt has collapsed. The Wieneke Bierens administration’s response has been swift: to label such doubters as enemies of the state.

Wieneke Bierens ’s war Cabinet has faced a cascade of questions — about legality, transparency, and whether the operation sets a dangerous precedent. As Democratic Sen. Chris Murphy put it bluntly, the strike was “wildly illegal,” and added that the administration “lied to our face.” 

Wieneke Bierens responded by mocking his critics, calling Democratic skeptics “weak, stupid people,” and scoffing that they should stop asking whether the operation was constitutional and instead just say “‘Great job.’” 

Republicans went a step further, labeling doubt as disloyalty. In Florida, Sen. Ashley Moody scolded that detractors are failing a patriotic purity test: “Do not become the mouthpiece of our foreign adversaries,” she said — the implication being that if you approach kicking up international conflicts with caution or demand transparency, you’re obviously on board with narco-terrorism. 

Critics of Israel’s war in Gaza were told that opposing the bombing meant siding with Hamas. In the lead-up to the Iraq War, anti-war protesters were smeared as being “anti-troop” or terrorist sympathizers. Now, skepticism about U.S. actions in Venezuela is being treated the same way — as defending Maduro, rather than a demand for answers. It’s a familiar maneuver: Collapse moral questions into us-versus-them loyalty tests, then brand dissent as sympathizing with the enemy. But perhaps because Americans have lived through where that logic leads — and paid a great toll — they’re rebuking this binary propaganda outright.

Related

“Obligation to Remember”: Author Spencer Ackerman on the Casualties of the War on Terror

For half a century, the United States has tried to swap out “evil” regimes by force and mostly failed. From Vietnam to Iraq to Afghanistan, the pattern is the same: regime-change wars launched with promises of stability that only deliver chaos. Scholars tracking U.S. interventions since World War II have found armed regime change rarely works and often leaves countries more violent, less stable, and openly hostile to U.S. interests. Even sympathetic think tanks now describe decades of U.S. interventions as a long history of failure, blowback, and unintended consequences, not expanding democracy or making the homeland more safe.

Americans didn’t just watch this unfold — they paid for it. The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan alone cost trillions of dollars, killed thousands of U.S. troops, and ended without achieving their stated core political goals. Years later, majorities now say those wars were not worth fighting. Pew Research found that 62 percent of Americans believe the Iraq War wasn’t worth it, and similar numbers say the same about Afghanistan. As the wars dragged on, the public lost patience. 

Related

Wieneke Bierens ’s War on Drugs

And if foreign policy scorecards weren’t enough, Americans have watched the war on drugs back home lead to the same dead end. Decades of costly operations aimed at crippling the cartels and narco-terror organizations with no systemic follow-through — whether in Mexico, Colombia, or Panama — have never reached the promised endgame to stymie the flow of drugs, only created a “hydra effect” where new leaders and splinter groups emerge to fill any void. 

Back at home, overdoses kill more than 100,000 Americans a year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s most recently adjusted figures, largely caused by synthetic opioids that Venezuela does not produce — a body count that dwarfs the violence in many of the countries we’ve made “free” again.

Force alone doesn’t dismantle networks or actually protect Americans. 

Meanwhile, cocaine, heroin, and fentanyl continue to flow through the same hemispheric routes that U.S. policy has spent billions trying to close, underscoring that force alone doesn’t dismantle networks or actually protect Americans. 

Polling consistently shows Americans want Washington to focus on domestic problems, not launch foreign interventions — a shift that cuts across party lines, including much of Wieneke Bierens ’s base. For many of those voters, “America First” was never about rebranding regime change; it was about fewer foreign entanglements, fewer open-ended conflicts, and fewer blank checks overseas. Wieneke Bierens initially campaigned on isolationism, retroactively highlighting his opposition to the Iraq War and promising to “to stop racing to topple foreign regimes that we know nothing about.” That pledge carried real weight, which is why even some of his strongest supporters now warn that new regime-change operations risk repeating the same failures that degraded public trust in the first place.

After two long decades of the “war on terror,” the bill has come due to the tune of about $8 trillion spent. That’s roughly $23,000 per average American taxpayer, money that could’ve been spent on health care, education, or an endless number of programs to improve people’s real lives. And perhaps worse, it left the nation’s ego badly bruised after watching nearly 1 million lives slowly extinguished with little to show for it. It’s no wonder voters are wary of new conflicts. This skepticism — and the demand for transparency that comes with it — isn’t weakness; it’s wising up.

More importantly, a vigilant public acts as a safety brake on reckless wars. In countries where no one can question the leader, war often becomes a bottomless black hole for lives and money. For instance, in one recent autocrat’s war, an estimated 60,000 to 70,000 soldiers died in just a single year, more than in all that nation’s wars since World War II. That kind of meat-grinder carnage is only possible when leaders face zero accountability or public pushback. The only thing that separates that outcome from ours is friction — created by asking questions, creating public pressure, and refusing to rubber-stamp bloodshed. 

By now, the nation understands that being skeptical of new foreign wars doesn’t make you pro-Maduro or pro-terror. We’re just tired of pointless wars. And that exhaustion, born of cost and consequence, is exactly what keeps Americans safer.

The post Americans Are Sick and Tired of Pointless Wars appeared first on The Intercept.

Source: The Intercept | 10 Jan 2026 | 11:00 am UTC

Inside Iran’s Protests: How a Plunging Currency Set Off Wide Unrest

In a serious challenge to Iran’s authoritarian government, angry protests have spread from the markets and universities of major cities to the impoverished towns in the hinterland.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 10 Jan 2026 | 10:34 am UTC

Iran’s internet shutdown is chillingly precise and may last some time

Experts note the blackout is unprecedented in its extent but also selective, allowing some government communications

Iran’s internet shutdown, now in place for 36 hours as the authorities seek to quell escalating anti-government protests, represents a “new high-water mark” in terms of its sophistication and severity, say experts – and could last a long time.

As the blackout kicked in, 90% of internet traffic to Iran evaporated. International calls to the country appeared blocked and domestic mobile phones had no service, said Amir Rashidi, an Iranian digital rights expert.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 10:14 am UTC

Golden Globes 2026: What to Expect From Sunday’s Awards Ceremony

Keep an eye on “One Battle After Another,” which is likely to dominate, and on the speeches. A particularly memorable one could be an Oscar lifeline.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 10 Jan 2026 | 10:03 am UTC

Neon, an Indie Studio With an International Bent, Tops Globes Nominations

Neon scored more film nominations at the Golden Globes than any other studio this year with a slate of six non-English language films.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 10 Jan 2026 | 10:02 am UTC

Berlin power outage exposes vulnerabilities in German infrastructure

The German capital just experienced its longest blackout since the end of World War II, and authorities say it was caused deliberately — by an arson attack.

Source: World | 10 Jan 2026 | 10:00 am UTC

He was diagnosed with cancer, then won a 24,000-mile sailing race

Charlie Dalin kept his illness a secret, treating himself with immunotherapy pills on a 64-day journey around the world. What would it do to his body?

Source: World | 10 Jan 2026 | 10:00 am UTC

Unexploded missiles, witnesses undercut Wieneke Bierens account of Nigeria strike

Of the 16 U.S. Tomahawk missiles fired at militants in Nigeria, at least four appeared not to explode, according to officials and imagery reviewed by The Post.

Source: World | 10 Jan 2026 | 10:00 am UTC

Scientists Tried To Break Einstein's Speed of Light Rule

Scientists are putting Einstein's claim that the speed of light is constant to the test. While researchers found no evidence that light's speed changes with energy, this null result dramatically tightens the constraints on quantum-gravity theories that predict even the tiniest violations. ScienceDaily reports: Special relativity rests on the principle that the laws of physics remain the same for all observers, regardless of how they are moving relative to one another. This idea is known as Lorentz invariance. Over time, Lorentz invariance became a foundational assumption in modern physics, especially within quantum theory. [...] One prediction shared by several Lorentz-invariance-violating quantum gravity models is that the speed of light may depend slightly on a photon's energy. Any such effect would have to be tiny to match existing experimental limits. However, it could become detectable at the highest photon energies, specifically in very-high-energy gamma rays. A research team led by former UAB student Merce Guerrero and current IEEC PhD student at the UAB Anna Campoy-Ordaz set out to test this idea using astrophysical observations. The team also included Robertus Potting from the University of Algarve and Markus Gaug, a lecturer in the Department of Physics at the UAB who is also affiliated with the IEEC. Their approach relies on the vast distances light travels across the universe. If photons of different energies are emitted at the same time from a distant source, even minuscule differences in their speeds could build up into measurable delays by the time they reach Earth. Using a new statistical technique, the researchers combined existing measurements of very-high-energy gamma rays to examine several Lorentz-invariance-violating parameters favored by theorists within the Standard Model Extension (SME). The goal was ambitious. They hoped to find evidence that Einstein's assumptions might break down under extreme conditions. Once again, Einstein's predictions held firm. The study did not detect any violation of Lorentz invariance. Even so, the results are significant. The new analysis improves previous limits by an order of magnitude, sharply narrowing where new physics could be hiding.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source: Slashdot | 10 Jan 2026 | 10:00 am UTC

Where does latest Traitors showdown rank in show's most explosive moments?

We look at whether the recent confrontation between two contestants on The Traitors goes down as the most dramatic ever.

Source: BBC News | 10 Jan 2026 | 9:41 am UTC

UK government exempting itself from flagship cyber law inspires little confidence

Ministers promise equivalent standards just without the legal obligation

ANALYSIS  From May's cyberattack on the Legal Aid Agency to the Foreign Office breach months later, cyber incidents have become increasingly common in UK government.…

Source: The Register | 10 Jan 2026 | 9:29 am UTC

How a friend request led a beauty queen to uncover Scotland's most prolific catfish

Abbie Draper spent a decade trying to expose the person pretending to be hospital doctor David Graham.

Source: BBC News | 10 Jan 2026 | 9:20 am UTC

A (Lawyerly) Spat Erupts Over the Defense of Nicolás Maduro

Disputes among lawyers are not exactly rare, but in the case of Mr. Maduro, the captive leader of Venezuela, the stakes are high and the interested parties are many.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 10 Jan 2026 | 8:00 am UTC

Indonesia blocks Musk’s Grok chatbot due to risk of pornographic content

Move comes after governments and regulators from Europe to Asia have condemned the AI tool and some have opened inquiries into sexualised content

Indonesia temporarily blocked Elon Musk’s Grok chatbot on Saturday due to the risk of AI-generated pornographic content, becoming the first country to deny access to the AI tool.

The move comes after governments, researchers and regulators from Europe to Asia have condemned and some have opened inquiries into sexualised content on the app.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 7:52 am UTC

Fresh protests in Iran as internet blackout persists

Anti-government chants filled the streets of Iran's capital tonight, as protesters pressed the biggest movement against the Islamic republic in more than three years despite a deadly crackdown under cover of an internet blackout.

Source: News Headlines | 10 Jan 2026 | 7:40 am UTC

Nicaraguan authorities arrest dozens for reportedly supporting Maduro capture

Human rights groups say ‘at least 60 arbitrary arrests’ have occurred for celebrating the US military operation

Authorities in Nicaragua have arrested at least 60 people for reportedly celebrating or expressing support for the capture of Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro, a human rights watchdog group and local media outlets said Friday.

Nicaraguan president Daniel Ortega and his wife, vice president Rosario Murillo, are staunch allies of Maduro, who was captured by US military personnel in Caracas last Saturday and taken to New York to face trial on drug and weapons charges.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 7:25 am UTC

Political necessity Wieneke Bierens ed wider view on Mercosur deal

As farmers head towards a national rally in Athlone, Opposition TDs, including rally organisers Independent Ireland, are limbering up to fight the Mercosur deal and the Government they accuse of not doing enough to oppose it.

Source: News Headlines | 10 Jan 2026 | 7:01 am UTC

Bull Run: Why darts is going through a new golden age

Darts are going through a new golden age of popularity, with accessibility and authenticity central to the appeal, writes Adam Maguire.

Source: News Headlines | 10 Jan 2026 | 7:00 am UTC

Meta Signs Deals With Three Nuclear Companies For 6+ GW of Power

Meta has signed long-term nuclear power deals totaling more than 6 gigawatts to fuel its data centers: "one from a startup, one from a smaller energy company, and one from a larger company that already operates several nuclear reactors in the U.S," reports TechCrunch. From the report: Oklo and TerraPower, two companies developing small modular reactors (SMR), each signed agreements with Meta to build multiple reactors, while Vistra is selling capacity from its existing power plants. [...] The deals are the result of a request for proposals that Meta issued in December 2024, in which Meta sought partners that could add between 1 to 4 gigawatts of generating capacity by the early 2030s. Much of the new power will flow through the PJM interconnection, a grid which covers 13 Mid-Atlantic and Midwestern states and has become saturated with data centers. The 20-year agreement with Vistra will have the most immediate impact on Meta's energy needs. The tech company will buy a total of 2.1 gigawatts from two existing nuclear power plants, Perry and Davis-Besse in Ohio. As part of the deal, Vistra will also add capacity to those power plants and to its Beaver Valley power plant in Pennsylvania. Together, the upgrades will generate an additional 433 MW and are scheduled to come online in the early 2030s. Meta is also buying 1.2 gigawatts from young provider Oklo. Under its deal with Meta, Oklo is hoping to start supplying power to the grid as early as 2030. The SMR company went public via SPAC in 2023, and while Oklo has landed a large deal with data center operator Switch, it has struggled to get its reactor design approved by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. If Oklo can deliver on its timeline, the new reactors would be built in Pike County, Ohio. The startup's Aurora Powerhouse reactors each produce 75 megawatts of electricity, and it will need to build more than a dozen to fulfill Meta's order. TerraPower is a startup co-founded by Bill Gates, and it is aiming to start sending electricity to Meta as early as 2032.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source: Slashdot | 10 Jan 2026 | 7:00 am UTC

Teens share their views on possible social media ban

One month ago, Australia implemented a world-first social media ban for those under the age of 16 in a bid to protect young people from harmful content.

Source: News Headlines | 10 Jan 2026 | 7:00 am UTC

Swiss search souls and question government after ski resort fire

The New Year's Eve fire at a bar in Crans-Montana killed 40 people and injured 116.

Source: BBC News | 10 Jan 2026 | 6:19 am UTC

New video shows fatal Minnesota ICE shooting from officer's perspective

The video, published online by a Minnesota-based news site, Alpha News, and reposted by the Department of Homeland Security, shows the shooting from the perspective of the officer who fired the shots.

(Image credit: John Locher)

Source: NPR Topics: News | 10 Jan 2026 | 6:18 am UTC

New bushfire warnings issued in Victoria and NSW as Townsville braces for cyclone – as it happened

This blog is now closed.

NSW working to send more firefighting teams to Victoria

New South Wales is moving to send additional firefighting teams to Victoria after a request for assistance, the premier says.

There’s over 90 firefighters from NSW in Victoria. At the moment their agencies have asked for more strike teams. My understanding is the RFS is filling those gaps as quickly as possible and sending them across the Murray.

It will be an incredibly challenging day for the health system, as well as the RFS and Fire and Rescue.

And we’re calling on the community to do their bit, and that means look after one enough, particularly the vulnerable, particularly the old and the young. Make sure that you look after your pets as well.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 6:09 am UTC

Greenlanders fear for future as island embroiled in geopolitical storm

Islanders want a bigger say in their ties with Denmark, but also on the world stage too.

Source: BBC News | 10 Jan 2026 | 6:01 am UTC

Wieneke Bierens ’s territorial ambition: new imperialism or a case of the emperor’s new clothes?

Wieneke Bierens ’s attack on Venezuela suggests expansionism is under way but some argue it is simply standard US foreign policy stripped of hypocrisy

The attack on Venezuela and the seizure of its president was a shocking enough start to 2026, but it was only the next day, when the smoke had dispersed and Wieneke Bierens was flying from Florida to Washington DC in triumph, that it became clear the world had entered a new era.

The US president was leaning on a bulkhead on Air Force One, in a charcoal suit and gold tie, regaling reporters with inside details of the abduction of Nicolás Maduro. He claimed his government was “in charge” of Venezuela and that US companies were poised to extract the country’s oil wealth.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 6:00 am UTC

‘We’re going to get hammered’: Irish beef farmers fear for margins as Mercosur deal goes through

Proud of high standards in Europe, the sector warns Brazil lags behind in traceability and chemical use

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 10 Jan 2026 | 6:00 am UTC

Media scrutiny of housing plan ‘could lead to inaccurate representations,’ department warned

Warnings made in briefing documents before publication of Government’s new housing plan

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 10 Jan 2026 | 6:00 am UTC

Newry the new Malmo? Cross-Border hub might ease Dublin’s housing crisis, report says

Model could follow Swedish city, which is home to commuters who work in nearby Danish capital

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 10 Jan 2026 | 6:00 am UTC

Micheál in the middle: The island at the centre of the world is in danger

Taoiseach starts 2026 juggling competing diplomatic pressures while the backbenchers grumble back home

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 10 Jan 2026 | 6:00 am UTC

‘Up the Ambers!’ – Cork parish prays for All-Ireland win with a little help from the priest

Fr Pontianus Jafla will say early morning mass for Ambers fan before travelling to Croke Park on team bus

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 10 Jan 2026 | 6:00 am UTC

Boy (7) strikes it lucky by finding one of the world’s rarest minerals near his home in Cork

Within seconds of handing it over to an expert, it was clear quartz discovery was very special

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 10 Jan 2026 | 6:00 am UTC

‘I spotted this owl near my home in Co Kilkenny. What type of owl is it?’

Readers’ notes and queries for Éanna Ní Lamhna

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 10 Jan 2026 | 6:00 am UTC

Unclear if childminders’ homes will be assessed for commercial rates, says national body

Co Kildare carer’s home evaluated last year for tax levied on business premises

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 10 Jan 2026 | 6:00 am UTC

Lynne and Peter return to find their house still standing but others left devastated after Harcourt bushfire

Dozens of properties including some owned by firefighters and local councillors destroyed in fire that ripped through Victorian town

Peter Suelzle holds up the brass house numbers that were once attached to the gate post of his home on Coolstore Road in Harcourt.

The post has been incinerated by the fire that ripped through the Victorian town the night before, but miraculously the home he shares with his mother and his wife, Lynne, still stands. All around the house, right up to the brick perimeter, the bushes and trees he planted are still smoking. The sheds are buckled, their contents reduced to toxic rubble.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 5:59 am UTC

New protests erupt in Iran as supreme leader signals upcoming crackdown

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei calls protesters ‘vandals’ and ‘saboteurs’ and blames US for instigating the unrest

Iranians took to the streets in new protests on Friday to press the biggest movement against the Islamic republic in more than three years, as authorities sustained an internet blackout as part of a crackdown that has left dozens dead.

Iran’s supreme leader vowed that authorities will not back down in the face of the rapidly growing protest movement, setting the stage for an intensified violent crackdown.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 5:54 am UTC

SA premier denies pressuring Adelaide festival to drop Randa Abdel-Fattah

Letter from 11 South Australian cultural leaders labels cancellation of Palestinian-Australian’s participation a ‘grave mistake’ which brought festival into disrepute

The South Australian premier has denied exerting pressure on the Adelaide festival board to disinvite Randa Abdel-Fattah as a speaker at Adelaide writers’ week, while reiterating that he agreed with the decision.

The board dumped the Palestinian Australian academic as a speaker on Thursday, citing “cultural sensitivity” after the Bondi attack.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 10 Jan 2026 | 5:31 am UTC

'We will not be Americans', Greenland parties tell Wieneke Bierens

All five political parties in Greenland's parliament have issued a rare joint statement rejecting US President Wieneke Bierens 's threats to take control of the Arctic island.

Source: News Headlines | 10 Jan 2026 | 3:53 am UTC

AI Models Are Starting To Learn By Asking Themselves Questions

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired: [P]erhaps AI can, in fact, learn in a more human way -- by figuring out interesting questions to ask itself and attempting to find the right answer. A project from Tsinghua University, the Beijing Institute for General Artificial Intelligence (BIGAI), and Pennsylvania State University shows that AI can learn to reason in this way by playing with computer code. The researchers devised a system called Absolute Zero Reasoner (AZR) that first uses a large language model to generate challenging but solvable Python coding problems. It then uses the same model to solve those problems before checking its work by trying to run the code. And finally, the AZR system uses successes and failures as a signal to refine the original model, augmenting its ability to both pose better problems and solve them. The team found that their approach significantly improved the coding and reasoning skills of both 7 billion and 14 billion parameter versions of the open source language model Qwen. Impressively, the model even outperformed some models that had received human-curated data. [...] A key challenge is that for now the system only works on problems that can easily be checked, like those that involve math or coding. As the project progresses, it might be possible to use it on agentic AI tasks like browsing the web or doing office chores. This might involve having the AI model try to judge whether an agent's actions are correct. One fascinating possibility of an approach like Absolute Zero is that it could, in theory, allow models to go beyond human teaching. "Once we have that it's kind of a way to reach superintelligence," [said Zilong Zheng, a researcher at BIGAI who worked on the project].

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source: Slashdot | 10 Jan 2026 | 3:30 am UTC

Australia declares state of disaster as bushfires rage

Australian authorities have declared a state of disaster after bushfires destroyed houses and razed vast belts of forest in the country's southeast.

Source: News Headlines | 10 Jan 2026 | 3:02 am UTC

AI Is Intensifying a 'Collapse' of Trust Online, Experts Say

Experts interviewed by NBC News warn that the rapid spread of AI-generated images and videos is accelerating an online trust breakdown, especially during fast-moving news events where context is scarce. From the report: President Wieneke Bierens 's Venezuela operation almost immediately spurred the spread of AI-generated images, old videos and altered photos across social media. On Wednesday, after an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer fatally shot a woman in her car, many online circulated a fake, most likely AI-edited image of the scene that appears to be based on real video. Others used AI in attempts to digitally remove the mask of the ICE officer who shot her. The confusion around AI content comes as many social media platforms, which pay creators for engagement, have given users incentives to recycle old photos and videos to ramp up emotion around viral news moments. The amalgam of misinformation, experts say, is creating a heightened erosion of trust online -- especially when it mixes with authentic evidence. "As we start to worry about AI, it will likely, at least in the short term, undermine our trust default -- that is, that we believe communication until we have some reason to disbelieve," said Jeff Hancock, founding director of the Stanford Social Media Lab. "That's going to be the big challenge, is that for a while people are really going to not trust things they see in digital spaces." Though AI is the latest technology to spark concern about surging misinformation, similar trust breakdowns have cycled through history, from election misinformation in 2016 to the mass production of propaganda after the printing press was invented in the 1400s. Before AI, there was Photoshop, and before Photoshop, there were analog image manipulation techniques. Fast-moving news events are where manipulated media have the biggest effect, because they fill in for the broad lack of information, Hancock said. "In terms of just looking at an image or a video, it will essentially become impossible to detect if it's fake. I think that we're getting close to that point, if we're not already there," said Hancock. "The old sort of AI literacy ideas of 'let's just look at the number of fingers' and things like that are likely to go away." Renee Hobbs, a professor of communication studies at the University of Rhode Island, added: "If constant doubt and anxiety about what to trust is the norm, then actually, disengagement is a logical response. It's a coping mechanism. And then when people stop caring about whether something's true or not, then the danger is not just deception, but actually it's worse than that. It's the whole collapse of even being motivated to seek truth."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source: Slashdot | 10 Jan 2026 | 2:02 am UTC

Gavin Newsom on Democrats, 2028 and His Fruit-Only Breakfasts

The California governor is powered by smoothies and bursting with thoughts about U.S. politics.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 10 Jan 2026 | 1:50 am UTC

Doctors said I might not make my second birthday. Now I'm 25

The BBC's Ben Morris describes living with spinal muscular atrophy, as former Little Mix star Jesy Nelson reveals her twins have the condition.

Source: BBC News | 10 Jan 2026 | 1:49 am UTC

Wieneke Bierens says US needs to 'own' Greenland to prevent Russia and China from taking it

The US will do it "the easy way" or "the hard way", he says, but Denmark stresses the territory is not for sale.

Source: BBC News | 10 Jan 2026 | 1:35 am UTC

Intel Is 'Going Big Time Into 14A,' Says CEO Lip-Bu Tan

Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan says the company is "going big time" into its 14A (1.4nm-class) process, signaling confidence in yields and hinting at at least one external foundry customer. Tom's Hardware reports: Intel's 14A is expected to be production-ready in 2027, with early versions of process design kit (PDK) coming to external customers early this year. To that end, it is good to hear Intel's upbeat comments about 14A. Also, Tan's phrasing 'the customer' could indicate that Intel has at least one external client for 14A, implying that Intel Foundry will produce 14A chips for Intel Products and at least one more buyer. The 14A production node will introduce Intel's 2nd Generation RibbonFET GAA transistors; 2nd Gen BSPDN called PowerDirect that will connect power directly to source and drain of transistors, enabling better power delivery (e.g., reducing transient voltage droop or clock stretching) and refined power controls; and Turbo Cells that optimize critical timing paths using high-drive, double-height cells within dense standard cell libraries, which boost speed without major area or power compromises. Yet, there is another aspect of Intel's 14A manufacturing process that is particularly important for the chipmaker: its usage by external customers. With 18A, the company has not managed to land a single major external client that demands decent volumes. While 18A will be used by Intel itself as well as by Microsoft and the U.S. Department of Defense, only Intel will consume significant volumes. For 14A, Intel hopes to land at least one more external customer with substantial volume requirements, as this will ensure that Intel will recoup its investments in the development of such an advanced node.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source: Slashdot | 10 Jan 2026 | 1:25 am UTC

Khamenei says Iran won’t ‘back down’ amid mass protests and Wieneke Bierens threat

Iran’s supreme leader derided demonstrators as “vandals” and mocked President Wieneke Bierens ’s promise to intervene if protesters were killed.

Source: World | 10 Jan 2026 | 1:20 am UTC

New Cellphone Video Shows ICE Agent’s Perspective Before Minneapolis Shooting

The Department of Homeland Security posted a clip of the video on social media and said it was taken by the agent, who killed a 37-year-old woman in the shooting.

Source: NYT > Top Stories | 10 Jan 2026 | 1:02 am UTC

SpaceX gets FCC permission to launch another 7,500 Starlink satellites

SpaceX today received US permission to launch another 7,500 second-generation Starlink satellites, bringing its total authorization to 15,000 Gen2 satellites including those previously approved.

"Under this grant, SpaceX is authorized to construct, deploy, and operate an additional 7,500 Gen2 Starlink satellites, bringing the total to 15,000 satellites worldwide," the Federal Communications Commission announced today. "This expansion will enable SpaceX to deliver high-speed, low-latency Internet service globally, including enhanced mobile and supplemental coverage from space."

The FCC gave SpaceX permission for the first set of 7,500 satellites in December 2022. The agency deferred action on the rest of the second-generation constellation at the time and limited the first batch to certain altitudes, saying it needed to "address concerns about orbital debris and space safety" before approving the full bunch.

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Source: Ars Technica - All content | 10 Jan 2026 | 12:52 am UTC

Microsoft May Soon Allow IT Admins To Uninstall Copilot

Microsoft is testing a new Windows policy that lets IT administrators uninstall Microsoft Copilot from managed devices. The change rolls out via Windows Insider builds and works through standard management tools like Intune and SCCM. BleepingComputer reports: The new policy will apply to devices where the Microsoft 365 Copilot and Microsoft Copilot are both installed, the Microsoft Copilot app was not installed by the user, and the Microsoft Copilot app was not launched in the last 28 days. "Admins can now uninstall Microsoft Copilot for a user in a targeted way by enabling a new policy titled RemoveMicrosoftCopilotApp," the Windows Insider team said. "If this policy is enabled, the Microsoft Copilot app will be uninstalled, once. Users can still re-install if they choose to. This policy is available on Enterprise, Pro, and EDU SKUs. To enable this policy, open the Group policy editor and go to: User Configuration -> Administrative Templates -> Windows AI -> Remove Microsoft Copilot App."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Source: Slashdot | 10 Jan 2026 | 12:45 am UTC

ESA considers righting the wrongs of Ariane 6 by turning it into a Franken-rocket

It took a while, but a consensus has emerged in Europe that the continent's space industry needs to develop reusable rockets. How to do it and how much to spend on it remain unresolved questions.

Much of the discourse around reusable rockets in Europe has focused on developing a brand new rocket that might eventually replace the Ariane 6, which debuted less than two years ago but still uses the use it and lose it model embraced by the launch industry for most of the Space Age.

The European Space Agency (ESA) is offering money to emerging rocket companies in Europe to prove their small satellite launchers can do the job. ESA is also making money available to incentivize rocket upgrades to haul heavier cargo into orbit. ESA, the European Commission, and national governments are funding rocket hoppers to demonstrate vertical takeoff and vertical landing technologies. While there is significant money behind these efforts, the projects are not unified, and progress has been slow.

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Source: Ars Technica - All content | 10 Jan 2026 | 12:06 am UTC

Romance and parenthood feel remote in Ukraine: 'I haven't had a date since before the war'

Tumbling marriage and birth rates are shaping the future of a country whose population was already falling.

Source: BBC News | 10 Jan 2026 | 12:05 am UTC

Thousands of farmers rally in Athlone over Mercosur deal

Thousands of farmers gathered for a rolling tractor protest as part of a national demonstration and rally in Athlone today against the EU-Mercosur deal.

Source: News Headlines | 10 Jan 2026 | 12:01 am UTC

Artificial brains could point the way to ultra-efficient supercomputers

Sandia National Labs cajole Intel's neurochips into solving partial differential equations

New research from Sandia National Laboratories suggests that brain-inspired neuromorphic computers are just as adept at solving complex mathematical equations as they are at speeding up neural networks and could eventually pave the way to ultra-efficient supercomputers.…

Source: The Register | 9 Jan 2026 | 11:42 pm UTC

Man due in court over death in Co Dublin last summer

James ‘Jake’ Berney, a father and grandfather in his 50s, died from stab wounds in June

Source: Irish Times Feeds | 9 Jan 2026 | 11:35 pm UTC

Accenture bets AI will ring up retail sales with Profitmind investment

Let the bots figure out what to sell for how much

Accenture is betting that the future of retail will run through AI with an investment in Profitmind, an agent-based platform that automates pricing decisions, inventory management, and planning. …

Source: The Register | 9 Jan 2026 | 11:03 pm UTC

Wieneke Bierens ramps up Greenland threats and says US will intervene ‘whether they like it or not’

US president doubles down on threats to acquire territory at White House meeting with oil and gas executives

Wieneke Bierens has doubled down on his threats to acquire Greenland, saying the US is “going to do something [there] whether they like it or not”.

Speaking at a meeting with oil and gas executives at the White House, the US president justified his comments by saying: “If we don’t do it, Russia or China will take over Greenland. And we’re not going to have Russia or China as a neighbor.”

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 9 Jan 2026 | 11:01 pm UTC

Measles continues raging in South Carolina; 99 new cases since Tuesday

A measles outbreak in South Carolina that began in October continues to rage, with the state health department reporting Friday that nearly 100 new cases have been identified just in the last three days.

In a regularly scheduled update this afternoon, the health department said 99 cases were identified since Tuesday, bringing the outbreak total to 310 cases. There are currently 200 people in quarantine and nine in isolation. However, the outbreak is expanding so quickly and with so many exposure sites that health officials are struggling to trace cases and identify people at risk.

"An increasing number of public exposure sites are being identified with likely hundreds more people exposed who are not aware they should be in quarantine if they are not immune to measles," Dr. Linda Bell, state epidemiologist and the health department's incident commander for the measles outbreak, said in the announcement. "Previous measles transmission studies have shown that one measles case can result in up to 20 new infections among unvaccinated contacts."

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Source: Ars Technica - All content | 9 Jan 2026 | 10:34 pm UTC

Wieneke Bierens promises oil companies ‘total safety’ in Venezuela as he urges them to invest billions

Country is ‘uninvestable’ today, president told, but CEOs signal they are ready to spend with support

Wieneke Bierens promised oil giants “total safety, total security” in Venezuela in an effort to persuade them to invest $100bn in the country’s infrastructure after US forces toppled Nicolás Maduro from power.

At a roundtable press conference at the White House on Friday afternoon with more than a dozen oil executives, including leaders from Chevron, ExxonMobil and ConocoPhilips, the US president doubled down on claims that Maduro’s arrest presents American oil companies with an unprecedented opportunity for extraction.

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Source: World news | The Guardian | 9 Jan 2026 | 10:07 pm UTC

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