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  • 6 hidden health risks of overdoing protein in your diet

    6 hidden health risks of overdoing protein in your diet

    Your kidneys are quiet multitaskers – filtering, cleansing, balancing. When you overload them with protein, especially from meat, they go into overdrive. Research in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology found that excess protein…

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  • Iron ore demand ‘plateaued’, says group owned by Australia’s richest woman

    Iron ore demand ‘plateaued’, says group owned by Australia’s richest woman

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    Gina Rinehart’s Hancock Prospecting has warned that iron ore demand has “plateaued” as the mining group owned by Australia’s richest person diversifies with investments in lithium and rare earths.

    Hancock on Friday said its net profit fell 44 per cent to A$3.1bn (US$2bn) in the year to June as the iron ore price declined and severe storms disrupted shipments from the Pilbara region of Western Australia. Revenue fell 21 per cent to A$11.6bn.

    Iron ore is Australia’s largest export, accounting for as much as 4 per cent of the country’s GDP, according to economists. But weakening demand from the Chinese property sector and the official launch later this year of the Simandou mine in Guinea, part-owned by Hancock’s partner Rio Tinto, has put pressure on prices.

    In recent years, Rinehart has expanded her company’s holdings to other materials, particularly rare earths, which are vital to the manufacture of fighter jets, electric vehicles and smartphones and of which China controls much of the world’s supply.

    The value of her holdings in companies including Lynas Rare Earths, MP Materials and Arafura Rare Earths has boomed after Australia and the US signed an agreement to co-invest in a non-Chinese supply chain. She has also invested in the energy, beef and consumer goods sectors.

    But Pilbara’s iron ore remains the core of Hancock’s business. The company said on Friday that “red tape” was threatening Australia’s mining sector, echoing peer BHP’s warning on the impact of stricter regulation.

    “This is concerning given demand for iron ore has plateaued and first ore from the massive, high-grade Simandou iron ore development — which will compete against Australian ore — is expected before the end of the year,” Hancock said in its results statement.

    Garry Korte, chief executive of Hancock, took aim at the Australian government’s spending plans and emissions reduction goals. 

    “Australian industries and companies operate in an environment of escalating government expenditure, including subsidies, benefits, opaque forms of support and increased bureaucratic wastage,” he said. “Many of these industries and companies cannot afford the massive changes and costs required to meet greater net zero requirements.”

    Rinehart, a supporter of US President Donald Trump, who has long railed against regulation and high taxation in the sector, said red tape would have a knock-on effect for public services.

    “Less real investment, record debt and substantial interest payments, declining international competitiveness, record business failures and excess bureaucracy do not enhance our standards of living,” she said.

    In the year to June, Hancock paid discretionary dividends of A$488mn to Rinehart and other family members. But A$6.4bn remains held in reserve for an unresolved court case over royalties between Rinehart and two of her children.

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  • 3I/ATLAS may be the oldest comet ever seen in 7 billion years, carrying secrets from before the solar system began |

    3I/ATLAS may be the oldest comet ever seen in 7 billion years, carrying secrets from before the solar system began |

    Astronomers have discovered an ancient, ice-rich interstellar object called 3I/ATLAS, which could transform our understanding of how comets form and evolve. Detected by the University of Oxford’s research team, this mysterious object is…

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  • Three billionaires went out for chicken and beer, and paid for everyone’s meal

    Three billionaires went out for chicken and beer, and paid for everyone’s meal


    Seoul, South Korea
     — 

    Three billionaires surprised diners when they walked into a popular fried chicken restaurant on Thursday – and picked up everyone’s bill.

    Jensen Huang, CEO of the world’s most valuable company, AI chip giant Nvidia, went to the Seoul chicken-and-beer joint with the leaders of two of South Korea’s global tech titans: Samsung Electronics chairman Lee Jae-yong and Hyundai Motor Group executive chair Chung Eui-sun.

    Fried chicken paired with ice-cold draft beer, known as “chimaek,” is a must-have for anyone visiting South Korea, and the tech potentates got their fill at Kkanbu Chicken in the heart of the nation’s capital, ahead of the APEC summit in Gyeongju.

    “I love fried chicken and beer with my friends, so Kkanbu is a perfect place, right?” Huang told live-streaming passersby as he arrived at the restaurant. As well as being the name of the restaurant chain, “Kkanbu” is a slang word for a very close friend.

    The three ate cheese balls, cheese sticks, boneless chicken and a fried chicken along with Korean beer Terra and the local rice spirit soju, according to national news agency Yonhap.

    Video from local news outlets showed the trio – combined net worth $195 billion – linking their drinking arms to take a shot of beer, a gesture that, in South Korea, cements friendship while drinking.

    Huang, Lee and Chung stepped out to offer chicken and cheese sticks to the assembled crowd.

    Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang makes a toast with others during a dinner meeting with Samsung Electronics Chairman Jay Y. Lee and Hyundai Motor Group Executive Chair Euisun Chung at a fried chicken restaurant in Seoul, South Korea, on October 30, 2025.

    “The chicken wings was so good. Have you been here before? It’s incredible, right?” Huang said when asked about his favourite items.

    “Anyone? Fried chicken?” he offered as he held chicken baskets up.

    When Huang rang the “golden bell,” a gesture to pay the bill for everyone in the restaurant, people cheered — though Samsung’s Lee paid the bill and Chung paid for a second round, according to Yonhap.

    Fresh from his high-stakes trade talks with US President Donald Trump, Chinese leader Xi Jinping is among Asian heads of government who have descended on Gyeongju, in southern South Korea, for the APEC summit.

    Access to cutting-edge AI chips – such as those that have pushed Nvidia to a market cap of about $5 trillion – is among issues being thrashed out between the US and China.

    After their dinner at Kkanbu Chicken, the three leaders headed to Nvidia’s GeForce Gamer Festival, where Huang – flanked by Lee and Chung – promised to make a big announcement at the APEC summit on Friday.

    “My announcements include my friends and we’re going to do amazing things for the future of Korea,” he told the crowd.

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  • Scientists shocked by reversed electric field around Earth

    Scientists shocked by reversed electric field around Earth

    The area of space controlled by Earth’s magnetic field is called the magnetosphere. Within this vast magnetic bubble, scientists have observed an electric field that stretches from the morning side of Earth to the evening side. This large-scale…

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  • Australia’s AGL to cut jobs as part of clean energy push

    Australia’s AGL to cut jobs as part of clean energy push

    PERTH, Oct 31 (Reuters) – Australia’s largest power producer AGL (AGL.AX), opens new tab said on Friday it will cut jobs as part of a move to cleaner energy and a mid-2030s closure of its coal-fired power plants.

    “As we transition our portfolio, and connect our customers to a sustainable future, we need to ensure that today’s business remains productive and competitive in this changing market while we continue to invest in our business for tomorrow,” an AGL spokesperson said.

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    Total cuts could be up to 300 roles, The Australian newspaper reported. The AGL spokesperson did not say exactly how many jobs out of its total workforce of about 4,200 would be cut.

    “We understand this may be a difficult time for our people and we’re committed to communicating with transparency and respect and providing support throughout the consultation process,” the spokesperson said.

    The company, which generates and sells power, has said previously that it plans to spend up to A$20 billion ($13 billion) in the next decade to build out clean energy and storage capacity to replace its ageing coal fleet.

    AGL, which has the highest carbon emissions footprint in Australia, separately said on Friday it will buy four new gas turbines from Siemens AB for its Kwinana gas peaking power plant in Western Australia for A$185 million.

    Reporting by Helen Clark; Editing by Sonali Paul

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles., opens new tab

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  • Assessment of Psychological Comorbidities Among Noncommunicable Disease Patients in Rural and Urban Areas of a District in Northern India: A Community-Based Cross-Sectional Study

    Assessment of Psychological Comorbidities Among Noncommunicable Disease Patients in Rural and Urban Areas of a District in Northern India: A Community-Based Cross-Sectional Study

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  • ‘The nuns were convinced they were possessed by demons’: goth and metal stars select the scariest music ever made | Music

    ‘The nuns were convinced they were possessed by demons’: goth and metal stars select the scariest music ever made | Music

    Cosey Fanni Tutti

    Bernard Herrmann – The Murder (1960)
    Scary music actually excites me, but the piece that most sends shivers down my spine is the music in the shower scene in Alfred Hitchcock’s film, Psycho. I’ve seen it numerous times and…

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  • Patti Smith’s Bread of Angels — her personal story of her life and loves

    Patti Smith’s Bread of Angels — her personal story of her life and loves

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    Patti Smith’s 14th book arrives as the singer, poet and artist is midway through a tour to celebrate 50 years since the…

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  • Everybody Scream album review — heightened intensity

    Everybody Scream album review — heightened intensity

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    Phantasmagoria is a familiar vibe for London singer-songwriter Florence Welch, the central force in alt-pop-rock outfit…

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