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  • Study highlights reduction in cardiovascular disease by adding nuts to diet

    Study highlights reduction in cardiovascular disease by adding nuts to diet

    People who consume more nuts, especially tree nuts such as almonds, walnuts, and cashews, have a significantly lower risk of death from cardiovascular disease compared with those who rarely or never eat them, according to a new study by Loma…

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  • Buckingham Palace statement on Prince Andrew in full

    Buckingham Palace statement on Prince Andrew in full

    Buckingham Palace has announced that Prince Andrew is to lose his prince title and will be leaving his Royal Lodge home in Windsor.

    Andrew Mountbatten Windsor – as he is now to be known – gave up his other royal titles earlier this month,…

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  • FDG-PET/CT detects metastatic eye tumors

    FDG-PET/CT detects metastatic eye tumors

    F-18 FDG-PET/CT may be a useful diagnostic tool for detecting metastatic uveal melanoma, researchers have reported.

    The finding is from a retrospective analysis of imaging results from 55 participants and suggests that F-18 FDG-PET/CT can play a…

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  • JPMorgan Set to Keep Lion’s Share of EA’s $500 Million Debt Fees

    JPMorgan Set to Keep Lion’s Share of EA’s $500 Million Debt Fees

    JPMorgan Chase & Co. is set to keep 40% of the fees tied to the $20 billion debt financing backing the take-private of Electronic Arts Inc., disappointing a large group of banks that were keen to get a bigger share of the deal.

    At 40%, JPMorgan will hold onto about $200 million of the total fee pool, according to a person with knowledge of the matter, who asked not to be identified discussing private information. The bank initially agreed to solely underwrite the debt commitment for the $55 billion acquisition.

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  • Amazon beats cloud growth estimates – Reuters

    1. Amazon beats cloud growth estimates  Reuters
    2. Amazon Earnings Preview: Layoffs Mark the Start of AI-Era Efficiency Drive  Investing.com
    3. Amazon’s stock has been badly lagging the market. Now investors are pinning big hopes on earnings.  businessinsider.com
    4. Zacks Investment Ideas feature highlights: Amazon.com, Alphabet and Tesla  Nasdaq
    5. Amazon Earnings on Deck — Traders Bet Billions on Biggest Post-Earnings Jump  Yahoo! Finance Canada

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  • Jesse Eisenberg is ‘excited’ to be donating one of his kidneys to a stranger: It’s ‘so needed’

    Jesse Eisenberg is ‘excited’ to be donating one of his kidneys to a stranger: It’s ‘so needed’

    Jesse Eisenberg shocked some folks during an appearance on “Today” with an announcement which seemed to also surprise him.

    The “Now You See Me: Now You Don’t” star was being…

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  • Long-term study challenges assumptions about epilepsy recovery

    Long-term study challenges assumptions about epilepsy recovery

    “The conventional wisdom is that once you’ve failed two medications, the likelihood of the third medication, or the fourth, making a patient seizure-free is less than 5%,” said Altalib, a professor of neurology at Yale School of…

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  • Intel in Talks to Acquire AI Chip Startup SambaNova – Bloomberg.com

    1. Intel in Talks to Acquire AI Chip Startup SambaNova  Bloomberg.com
    2. Profit Pressure Spurs Chip Deals  The Information
    3. SambaNova exploring sale after struggling to secure further funding – report  Data Center Dynamics
    4. AI Chip Startup SambaNova Explores Sale Amid Funding Woes and Nvidia Competition  WebProNews
    5. Intel Looking To Acquire Startup AI Chip Developer SambaNova: Report  CRN Magazine

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  • Ofcom criticises O2 for going ‘against the spirit’ of new pricing rules | O2

    Ofcom criticises O2 for going ‘against the spirit’ of new pricing rules | O2

    The UK telecoms regulator has criticised O2 for raising prices for millions of mobile phone customers by more than they were originally told.

    In an unusual intervention, Ofcom said it was “disappointed” by the phone network’s decision, which “goes against the spirit of our rules”.

    Up to 15 million O2 customers will see their monthly bills rise by more than they were told when they signed up to their contracts, after the company announced an additional 70p per month increase to its annual price rises from April 2026.

    The originally stated £1.80 monthly rise will now be almost 40% higher at £2.50 a month, taking the annual increase from £21.60 to £30.

    The move comes months after Ofcom brought in rules that mean telecoms firms must tell people upfront – in “pounds and pence” – about any future price rises. At the time it said the rules, which took effect in January, meant there would be “no nasty surprises” for consumers.

    The rules forced telecoms firms to set out clear details of any expected rises throughout the duration of their deals.

    It came after a 2023 Guardian investigation exposed “greedflation” in the telecoms sector, with millions of people facing mid-contract rises in monthly payments of up to 17.3%.

    Earlier this week, Martin Lewis, the founder of MoneySavingExpert.com, said the move by O2 “feels to me a bit like it makes a mockery of Ofcom’s new ‘pounds and pence’ consumer protection regime”.

    He added: “The worry is, now O2 has opened the door to this behaviour, other mobile firms will feel less worried about following suit.”

    Ofcom said it wanted customers to have certainty about their monthly mobile bills so they could plan their household budgets, which was why it had banned unpredictable price rises linked to inflation and instead required firms to tell customers upfront in pounds and pence about any increases in their contract.

    It said: “We are disappointed by O2’s decision. This goes against the spirit of our rules, which are designed to ensure greater certainty and transparency for customers when they sign up.”

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    Ofcom said it had written to the major mobile phone companies to “remind them of their obligations to treat customers fairly”, and added that customers who wanted to avoid these price rises could exercise their right to exit the contract without penalty and sign up to a new deal. It has offered tips on its website on how to do this.

    Lewis said that while all affected mobile customers could leave penalty-free, “we know few will – most will likely just have to suck up a rise that was more than they were told when they signed up”.

    O2 has been approached for comment. It told BBC News that it had not gone against the regulations and that Ofcom’s rules “do not prevent companies from increasing annual price changes – for example, to invest in improving networks”.

    The company said it spent £700m a year on improving infrastructure, and that customers could leave their contracts without a penalty.

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