OpenAI on Tuesday unveiled ChatGPT Atlas, a long-anticipated artificial intelligence-powered web browser built…
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OpenAI launches AI browser Atlas in latest challenge to Google
The OpenAI logo appears on a mobile phone in front of a computer screen with random binary data, March 9, 2023, in Boston. (PHOTO / AP) -
Thunder-Rockets: 4 takeaways as OKC rings in new season with thrilling win
Fantastic Finish: Thunder outlast Rockets in 2OT on ring night.
OKLAHOMA CITY — The Thunder needed a Game 7 to prove it was the best team last season, then two overtimes to open this season and show that … not much has changed?
Perhaps….
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TV tonight: an explosive action thriller about serial killers on the loose | Television
The Hunting Party
9pm, U&Alibi
There’s an explosive start to this US action thriller when a bomb rips apart a secret underground prison in Wyoming – and the nation’s most dangerous serial killers escape. It’s up to former FBI profiler…Continue Reading
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‘I’ve been given a second chance at life’
Steve KnibbsGloucestershire and
Carys NallyBBC News, West of England
BBC
Michael Gamble will be taking on a series of fundraising challenges for Movember A student who tried to take his own life wants to raise awareness of issues around male mental…
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Royals’ copies of Austen works to be displayed at Windsor Castle
The copy of Pride and Prejudice that Prince Albert read to Queen Victoria will go on public display for the first time at Windsor Castle later this month.
George IV’s specially bound copy of Emma, personally dedicated by Jane Austen to the future…
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Royals’ copies of Austen works to be displayed at Windsor Castle
Austen’s Pride and Prejudice was read by Queen Victoria and Prince Albert together and the monarch recorded in her journal in July 1853 that her husband read it to her as she recovered from measles.
George IV, an avid reader of novels, kept a set…
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Mongolia’s measles cases surpass 13,000-Xinhua
ULAN BATOR, Oct. 22 (Xinhua) — The total number of measles cases in Mongolia has increased to 13,532, the country’s National Center for Communicable Diseases (NCCD) said Wednesday.
Meanwhile, the total number of recoveries has reached…
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‘Scam clothing website uses my home address for its returns’
Martin, who lives in Henley on Thames, Oxfordshire, has also been receiving calls from people about their trouser orders – since buying his own pair of waterproof trousers.
He says he hadn’t seen the company before but for the price of the…
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Jersey woman says ‘a cloud has lifted’
Chris CraddockJersey communities reporter
BBC
Laura Elizabeth was overcome by emotion when she heard the news about the new treatment A woman whose mother, aunt and grandmother died from Huntington’s disease has described a breakthrough in treating…
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Japan’s exports and imports grow in September despite Trump’s tariffs
Japan’s exports grew 4.2% in September, according to government data, on robust shipments to Asia that offset the decline to those destined for the U.S., which were impacted by President Donald Trump’s tariffs
TOKYO — TOKYO (AP) — Japan’s exports grew 4.2% in September, according to government data Wednesday, on robust shipments to Asia that offset a decline in exports to the U.S., which were impacted by President Donald Trump’s tariffs.
Japan’s exports to Asia jumped 9.2% last month compared to the same period a year earlier, according to Japanese Ministry of Finance data.
Exports to the U.S. dropped 13.3%, marking the sixth straight month of on-year declines, while those to China surged 5.8% compared to last year.
Auto shipments to the U.S. dropped 24.2% in September. Automakers like Toyota Motor Corp. are pillars of Japan’s economy.
Japan’s imports edged up 3.3% in September overall, growing 6% in Asia, including a 9.8% rise in imports from China.
The findings come a day after Sanae Takaichi was chosen in a parliamentary vote as the nation’s prime minister, becoming the first woman to lead Japan.
She is known for nationalist-leaning conservative views but is also seen as a proponent of bigger public spending, which has sent share prices generally rising in Tokyo in recent sessions.
Takaichi has also promised higher wages, as well as looser monetary policy, which would favor a weak Japanese yen. That would be a boon for the nation’s giant exporters by raising the value of overseas earnings when converted into yen.
Takaichi faces an uphill battle in realizing her policies because the ruling Liberal Democratic Party, even with coalition partners, does not have a majority in either house of parliament. Her own party remains divided.
Trump, who is expected to visit Japan later this month to meet with Takaichi, announced a trade framework with Japan in July that placed a 15% tax on Japanese goods.
At that time, Japan promised to invest $550 billion into the U.S. and open its economy more to American automobiles and rice. The 15% tax on imported Japanese goods was a significant drop from the 25% rate that Trump had said earlier.
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Yuri Kageyama is on Threads: https://www.threads.com/@yurikageyama
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