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  • Liam Lawson pinpoints the moment that cost him points chance in Austin

    Liam Lawson pinpoints the moment that cost him points chance in Austin

    Liam Lawson was left frustrated after narrowly missing out on points to Fernando Alonso at the United States Grand Prix – and reckons one particular moment may have cost him his chance of scoring.

    Lawson has scored points on just one occasion…

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  • Lazarus TV review — Bill Nighy turns ghostly shrink in schlocky Harlan Coben adaptation

    Lazarus TV review — Bill Nighy turns ghostly shrink in schlocky Harlan Coben adaptation

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

    Television adaptations of popcorn thriller writer Harlan Coben’s extravagantly plotted novels, from Fool Me Once to The…

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  • Go big and go ome – Illumina

    Go big and go ome – Illumina

    1. Go big and go ome  Illumina
    2. What Illumina (ILMN)’s 5-Base Sequencing Launch Means for Shareholders  simplywall.st
    3. Illumina constellation mapped read technology uncovers hard-to-see genomic insights in GeneDx pilot  PR Newswire
    4. Illumina fuels multiomic discovery with launch of 5-base solution, unlocking simultaneous genomic and epigenomic insights  Yahoo Finance
    5. Illumina releases its novel 5-base solution  TipRanks

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  • Netflix Developing ‘Catan’ TV Series Based on Hit Board Game

    Netflix Developing ‘Catan’ TV Series Based on Hit Board Game

    The Catan franchise may have taken the longest road to a Hollywood adaptation, but the hit board game has finally struck a deal to bring the iconic resource-management strategy game to the screen.

    Netflix has won the rights to the…

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  • Scientists found the metabolic ceiling that limits human endurance

    Scientists found the metabolic ceiling that limits human endurance

    When ultrarunners lace up for races that last days and span hundreds of miles, they aren’t just testing grit and quads – they’re running controlled experiments on human physiology. A new study finds a stark result: even the fittest…

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  • Scientists stumble on a hidden quantum trick in 2D materials

    Scientists stumble on a hidden quantum trick in 2D materials

    When arranged in just the right ways, two-dimensional materials can display unusual and valuable quantum effects such as superconductivity and exotic types of magnetism. Understanding why these effects arise, and how to control them, remains one…

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  • This simple innovation could change blood pressure testing forever

    This simple innovation could change blood pressure testing forever

    A newly developed method that improves the accuracy of ankle blood pressure measurements could transform care for people who are unable to have their blood pressure taken from the arm.

    Researchers from the University of Exeter Medical School, in…

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  • This $600 poop cam wants you to film your toilet bowl | Health & wellbeing

    This $600 poop cam wants you to film your toilet bowl | Health & wellbeing

    You can buy a smart ring to track your sleep activity or a smartwatch to monitor your heartbeat, so perhaps it makes sense that health tech’s next frontier has come for your toilet. Behold: Dekoda, Kohler’s new toilet cam. No, not that type…

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  • Countdown to 50: Part 1 – Establishing a New World Juniors Tournament

    Countdown to 50: Part 1 – Establishing a New World Juniors Tournament

    Canada’s Wayne Gretzky #99 skating during warm-up.


    photo: © Paul Bereswill / Hockey Hall Of Fame

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  • US firm collapses ringing ‘alarm bells’, says Bank of England chief

    US firm collapses ringing ‘alarm bells’, says Bank of England chief

    The collapse of two US companies could be a sign of wider problems in the financial system and “alarm bells” were ringing, the governor of the Bank of England has said.

    Andrew Bailey told a House of Lords committee that it was important to take the failure of car parts supplier First Brands and subprime car lender Tricolor “very seriously” – and drew parallels with the 2008 financial crisis.

    He said it was unclear whether these were one-off issues, or a case of “the canary in the coal mine”.

    Mr Bailey also said the Bank of England was planning to run a “stress test” of private equity and credit firms.

    The bankruptcies of First Brands and Tricolor have raised questions about the quality of deals in what is known as the private credit market – where companies arrange loans from non-bank lenders.

    Mr Bailey said he did not want “to sound too foreboding at this point”, but that “there is a lot we don’t know about First Brands and Tricolour”.

    “I think the big question… is: are these cases idiosyncratic, or are they what I call the canary in the coalmine?

    “Are they telling us something more fundamental about the private finance and private assets sector?

    “I think that’s still a very open question in the US. I think it’s a question we have to take very seriously.”

    On the way loans were being made by private credit, Mr Bailey said there was starting to be “what used to be called sort of slicing and dicing and tranching of loan structures”.

    “And, you know, if you’re involved before the financial crisis, the alarm bells start going off at that point.”

    Reflecting on the tone of the conversation prior to the 2008 financial crisis, he said that back then there had been a belief that sub-prime mortgages were “too small to be systematic” but that this had been “the wrong call”.

    Last week, Jamie Dimon, the boss of US banking giant JPMorgan Chase, warned the failure of the two US firms could be a sign of more to come.

    “My antenna goes up when things like that happen,” he told analysts. “I probably shouldn’t say this, but when you see one cockroach, there are probably more.”

    Also appearing before the House of Lords’ financial services regulation committee, Sarah Breeden, the Bank’s deputy governor for financial stability, said the Bank would be examining the private finance sector.

    “We can see the vulnerabilities here,” she said. “We can see parallels with the global financial crisis.”

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