Rugby is for everyone — and the Falcons are living proof.
In the NZR+ special feature, Gay & Inclusive Rugby: The NZ Falcons, viewers are invited behind the scenes as Aotearoa’s pioneering gay and inclusive rugby club…
Rugby is for everyone — and the Falcons are living proof.
In the NZR+ special feature, Gay & Inclusive Rugby: The NZ Falcons, viewers are invited behind the scenes as Aotearoa’s pioneering gay and inclusive rugby club…
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EXCLUSIVE: Harry Lawtey (Industry), Jodie Turner-Smith (Tron: Ares), Viola Prettejohn (The Testament of Ann Lee), and Burn Gorman (upcoming Frankenstein) have joined Olivia Cooke in Brides, the new Neon horror film from Chloe Okuno, which…
The only Black branch chair of Reform UK has left the rightwing populist party, saying the tone of Britain’s migration debate is “doing more harm than good”.
Neville Watson, from north London, told the Guardian he had not experienced any…
Cardboard marks the latest collaboration between DNEG Animation and Locksmith Animation. Directed by Jean-Philippe Vine (Ron’s Gone Wrong), it tells the tale of a overwhelmed, single dad pig who is faced with a choice: dwell on the past and his…
Solar farm developers have received government approval to build on a 474-acre (192 hectare) site in Kent.
The Department for Energy Security and Net Zero granted development consent for the Stonestreet Green Solar project near Ashford on Thursday.
Developer Evolution Power said the solar panel and battery storage scheme would “make a significant contribution” to the UK’s clean energy targets.
Kent Wildlife Trust, Weald of Kent MP Katie Lam and local parish councils were among those to raise concerns about the scheme’s impact on the rural landscape and biodiversity.
The site, north of Aldington, will be able to power up to 42,000 homes once complete, according to Evolution Power.
The firm said the site’s biodiversity would be “greatly enhanced” and soil condition improved during Stonestreet Green Solar’s lifespan.
It cited a nearby grid connection and high sunlight levels in the area among reasons the site was chosen.
The company’s director Conor McNally said it would “look forward to progressing the project in due course” following the consent order.
Evolution Power claimed in its application that construction would take one year and create the equivalent of 132 jobs.
The government is responsible for permitting the development, rather than Ashford Borough Council, as it will have a generating capacity greater than 50 megawatts.
The Planning Inspectorate said it received the application in June 2024.
“Local people, the local authority and other interested parties were able to participate in this six-month examination,” the agency said.
Over 300 representations were received.
The Planning Inspectorate said it “listened and gave full consideration to all local views and the evidence gathered” before it recommended consent was granted.
Tesla is recalling more than 63,000 Cybertrucks in the U.S. because the front lights are too bright, which may cause a distraction to other drivers and increase the risk of a collision.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said that the recall includes certain Cybertrucks with a model year between 2024 and 2026. The vehicles were made between Nov. 13, 2023, and Oct. 11, 2025, with operating software versions prior to 2025.38.3.
The agency said that Tesla is not aware of any collisions, injuries, or fatalities related to the condition.
Tesla, which is run by billionaire Elon Musk, is issuing a free software update to correct the issue.
Earlier this month, federal regulators opened yet another investigation into Tesla’s self-driving feature after dozens of incidents in which the cars ran red lights or drove on the wrong side of the road, sometimes crashing into other vehicles and causing injuries.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said in a filing that it was looking into 58 incidents in which Teslas reportedly violated traffic safety laws while using the company’s so-called Full Self-Driving mode, leading to more than a dozen crashes and fires and nearly two dozen injuries. The new probe adds to several other open investigations into Tesla technology that could upend Musk’s plans to turn millions of his cars already on the road into completely driverless vehicles with a over-the-air update to their software.
In March U.S. safety regulators recalled virtually all Cybertrucks on the road. The NHTSA’s recall, which covered more than 46,000 Cybertrucks, warned that an exterior panel that runs along the left and right side of the windshield can detach while driving, creating a dangerous road hazard for other drivers, increasing the risk of a crash.
On Wednesday Tesla reported a fourth straight decline in quarterly profit, even as sales rose. The automaker reported third-quarter earnings plunged 37% to $1.4 billion, or 39 cents a share, from $2.2 billion, or 62 cents a share, a year earlier. That marked the fourth quarter in a row that profit dropped. And even the revenue rise, a welcome relief from a sales plunge earlier in the year due to anti-Musk boycotts, came with a significant caveat: Customers rushed to take advantage of a $7,500 federal EV tax credit before it expired on Oct. 1, possibly stealing sales from the current quarter.
Published
Fall 2025
Image caption:
Greg Rienzi
Editor
‘The Pitt’…
The Apple logo on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan.
Sven Hoppe | Picture Alliance | Getty Images
Apple on Thursday lost a London lawsuit accusing the U.S. tech company of abusing its dominant position by charging app developers an unfair 30% commission through its app store.
The Competition Appeal Tribunal (CAT) ruled against Apple after a trial of the lawsuit, brought on behalf of around 20 million iPhone and iPad users in the United Kingdom and valued at up to 1.5 billion pounds ($2.01 billion), earlier this year.
Rachael Kent, the British academic who brought the case, argued Apple had made “exorbitant profits” by excluding all competition for the distribution of apps and in-app purchases.
The CAT ruled that Apple had abused its dominant position by shutting out competition in the app distribution market and by “charging excessive and unfair prices in the form of the commission which it charges developers”.
The tribunal said members of the claimant class were entitled to damages, with how damages are to be calculated to be argued at a hearing next month.
Apple – which has faced mounting pressure from regulators in the U.S. and Europe over the fees it charges developers – said it would appeal against the ruling, which it said “takes a flawed view of the thriving and competitive app economy”.
“This ruling overlooks how the App Store helps developers succeed and gives consumers a safe, trusted place to discover apps and securely make payments,” an Apple spokesperson said.
The case was the first mass lawsuit against a tech giant to come to trial under Britain’s fledgling class action-style regime, with many other cases waiting in the wings