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  • India beat Great Britain 3-2 in opener

    India beat Great Britain 3-2 in opener

    The junior Indian hockey team opened its Sultan of Johor Cup 2025 campaign with a 3-2 win over Great Britain at the Taman Daya Hockey Stadium in Johor Bahru, Malaysia, on Saturday.

    Captain Rohit (45+’, 52′) and Ravneet Singh (23′) were the…

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  • Mystery of jet streams on gas giants explained with unified model

    Mystery of jet streams on gas giants explained with unified model

    Researchers from the Netherlands Research School of Astronomy have created a new model that, they believe, explains the extreme jet streams seen on large planets like Jupiter and Saturn.

    All four of the giant planets (Jupiter, Saturn,…

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  • Meghan Markle ‘went full-on Diana’ during Paris trip to send a message – Royals – News

    Meghan Markle ‘went full-on Diana’ during Paris trip to send a message – Royals – News

    Meghan Markle was in Paris over the weekend, which didn’t surprise one royal watcher, because that’s the Duchess’s thing, to be out and about when fall sets in.

    According to Jane Barr, typically Meghan is spotted in New York City cosplaying

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  • Stylish beat-’em-ups, platformers and RPGs, and other new indie games worth checking out

    Stylish beat-’em-ups, platformers and RPGs, and other new indie games worth checking out

    Welcome to our latest roundup of what’s going on in the indie game space. Some gorgeous new games arrived this week, and we’ve got some demos and reveals from upcoming projects to take a look at. 

    Later this month, Lorelai and the Laser Eyes…

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  • China’s rare earth gambit reveals the next phase of its economic warfare – Politico

    1. China’s rare earth gambit reveals the next phase of its economic warfare  Politico
    2. China tightens export controls on rare-earth metals: Why this matters  Al Jazeera
    3. What critical minerals are on China’s export control list now?  Dawn
    4. China’s Rare Earth Leverage Is the Frontline of 21st Century Geopolitics  The Diplomat – Asia-Pacific Current Affairs Magazine
    5. China flexes clout over EV, battery supply-chain with new round of export curbs  Automotive News

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  • Browser wars, a hallmark of the late 1990s tech world, are back with a vengeance—thanks to AI

    Browser wars, a hallmark of the late 1990s tech world, are back with a vengeance—thanks to AI

    The early days of the internet saw intense competition between graphical web browsers: Netscape Navigator faced off against Microsoft’s Internet Explorer. No sooner had Explorer won that conflict than a new war for marketshare erupted between…

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  • Science news this week: Astronomers close in on comet 3I/ATLAS’s origins, a strange gravity anomaly discovered off Africa and AI designs brand-new viruses

    Science news this week: Astronomers close in on comet 3I/ATLAS’s origins, a strange gravity anomaly discovered off Africa and AI designs brand-new viruses

    This week’s science news was bursting with mind-blowing astronomical observations, led by new discoveries about the origins of the comet 3I/ATLAS.

    The comet, an interstellar interloper from far beyond our solar system, was first spotted in late…

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  • Australia’s March Toward 100 Percent Clean Energy

    Australia’s March Toward 100 Percent Clean Energy

    “[The clutch] is like 1950s technology—it’s really boring,” Westerman said (“boring,” for grid operators, is the highest form of praise). ​“The marginal cost of putting this in is like nothing compared to the cost of the plant.”

    A company called SSS has built these clutches for decades. One is nearly operational in the state of Queensland at the Townsville gas-fired plant, which Siemens Energy is converting into what it calls a ​“hybrid rotating grid stabilizer.” Siemens says this project is the world’s first such conversion of a gas turbine of this size.

    That particular retrofit took about 18 months and involved some relocating of auxiliary components at Townsville to make room for the new clutch. So it’s not instantaneous, but far easier than building a new synchronous condenser from scratch, and about half the cost, per Siemens.

    Some novel long-duration storage techniques also provide their own spinning mass. Canadian startup Hydrostor expects to break ground early next year on a fully permitted and contracted project in Broken Hill, a city deep in the Outback of New South Wales.

    Broken Hill lent its name to BHP, which started there as a silver mine in 1885 and has grown to one of the largest global mining companies. More recently, the desert landscape played host to the postapocalyptic car chases of Mad Max 2. Now, roughly 18,000 people live there, at the end of one long line connecting to the broader grid.

    Hydrostor will shore up local power by excavating an underground cavity and compressing air into it; releasing the compressed air turns a turbine to regenerate up to 200 megawatts for up to eight hours, serving the community if the grid connection goes down and otherwise shipping clean power to the broader grid.

    But unlike batteries, Hydrostor’s technology uses old-school generators, and its compressors contribute additional spinning metal.

    “We have a clutch spec’d in for New South Wales, because they need the inertia,” Hydrostor CEO Jon Norman said. ​“It’s so simple; it’s like the same clutches on your standard car.”

    Transmission grid operator Transgrid ran a competitive process to determine the best way to provide system security to Broken Hill in the event it had to operate apart from the grid, Norman said. That analysis chose Hydrostor’s bid to simply insert a clutch when it installs its machinery.

    The project still needs to get built, but if up-and-coming clean storage technologies could step in to provide that grid security, it wouldn’t all have to come from ghostly gas plants lingering on the system.

    “It’s a different feeling [in Australia]—there’s a can do, go get ​’em, ​‘put me in coach’ attitude,” said Audrey Zibelman, the American grid expert who ran AEMO before Westerman. ​“When you’re determined to say how best to go about this, as opposed to why it’s hard or why it doesn’t work, the solutions appear.”

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  • iOS 26: Your iPhone Will Get These Eight New Emoji Next Year

    iOS 26: Your iPhone Will Get These Eight New Emoji Next Year

    Apple released iOS 26 on Sept. 15, and while the update didn’t include any new emoji, a future iOS 26 update will bring eight new emoji to your iPhone. The Unicode Consortium approved eight emoji in September as part of Unicode 17.0. That…

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  • ‘Rock stars would be like, Yeah, bring the kid in’: Cameron Crowe on his wild years as a teenage music journalist | Cameron Crowe

    ‘Rock stars would be like, Yeah, bring the kid in’: Cameron Crowe on his wild years as a teenage music journalist | Cameron Crowe

    Cameron Crowe has a vivid memory of the day he began filming his own life story. It was the summer of 1999 and he was back in his home city of San Diego, on the same streets where he had spent his surreal teenage years, flitting between suburban…

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