WFN is pleased to announce that we will again this year be able to offer Junior Travelling Fellowships (JTFs) for young neurologists from countries classified by the World Bank as Low or Lower Middle Income, to attend approved international…
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LG’s expanded roster of Bluetooth speakers includes a military-grade adventurer and a powerful party-starter
LG’s Xboom line of Bluetooth speakers is expanding, taking the fight to rivals such as JBL, Sony and Bose with a raft of new models designed to carve out a chunk of one of the market’s most competitive categories.
Launching at CES 2026 are the…
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Preview 2026: Clear commitment to upholding Germany’s renewables boom still lacking – industry
If we want to make our energy supply affordable, sustainable, and resilient now and in the future, renewables really are the only right choice. They offer domestic value creation, often directly at the local level and help free us from dependencies created by energy politics. In addition, renewables leave other energy sources behind in terms of power generation costs. They are not only central to climate action but also help stabilise Germany economically and increase its resilience to external shocks.
How would you generally rate the performance of the coalition government of chancellor Friedrich Merz in energy and climate policy so far? Where do you see promising approaches – and where do you identify notable shortcomings?
The recently adopted Economic Promotion Act for Germany, which is supposed to steer investments into renewable energy, is a good signal in my opinion, much like the commitments to faster planning and licensing set out in the Infrastructure of the Future Act. Apart from that, I welcome the fact that policymakers have begun to understand that grids, storage systems, and energy generation must be thought of as one integrated system.
At the same time, a clear signal from the government that the current expansion path for renewables will be resolutely continued is still lacking. One example for this is the mobility sector, where we would wish to see a clearer commitment to decarbonisation. A transformation as profound as the one that the German auto industry is faced with needs a reliable political framework. In Germany, the focus is largely set on protecting the status quo. This consumes resources needed for the necessary investment in future-oriented structures, which in turn makes it hard to safeguard value creation, jobs, and technological leadership in the area of renewable propulsion technologies in the long term.
Which topics and developments would you say are going to become relevant in 2026? And what conclusions do you think the government should draw from them?
The first months of the new year will clearly be focussed on the upcoming reform of the Renewable Energy Act (EEG) and the Building Modernisation Act (GMG). We urgently need clarity on the future course of the heating sector’s transition. For the coming year it will be important for the government to act both quickly and in a way that is viable in the long term. We need speed and substance – in grid expansion, in reducing bureaucracy, in the smart meter roll-out, and in digitalisation. Our call for action is therefore clear: We need system-friendly investments instead of short-term cost reduction measures.
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Ten found guilty of cyber-bullying Brigitte Macron
Two of the defendants – self-styled independent journalist Natacha Rey and internet fortune-teller Amandine Roy – were found guilty of slander in 2024 for claiming that France’s first lady had never existed.
They said her brother Jean-Michel…
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Ruben Amorim: Manchester United sack head coach after 14 months in charge
When Manchester United appointed Amorim as head coach – note the title – they viewed it as a progressive decision, bringing in someone who would work in a modern structure and develop as he went along.
Amorim had a good relationship with the…
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Opioid Use Disorder: Identifying new targets in the fight against opioids
Opioid use disorder is a global public health crisis that continues to have devastating consequences for individuals and society (Mathis et al., 2025). Despite its prevalence, the mechanisms underlying this disorder remain poorly…
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‘Are you planning to leave?’
Garda Knowles demands an answer from Paul in Tuesday’s Fair City on RTÉ One and the RTÉ Player.
With the stolen wine investigation hanging over Paul, Orla is concerned that he is making matters worse with his lies.
Orla…
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This CRISPR breakthrough turns genes on without cutting DNA
Scientists at UNSW Sydney have developed a new form of CRISPR technology that could make gene therapy safer while also resolving a decades-long debate about how genes are switched off. The research shows that small chemical markers attached to…
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This CRISPR breakthrough turns genes on without cutting DNA
Scientists at UNSW Sydney have developed a new form of CRISPR technology that could make gene therapy safer while also resolving a decades-long debate about how genes are switched off. The research shows that small chemical markers attached to…
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Scientist reveal key factor to beat ovarian cancer
Ovarian cancer is one of the most common forms of cancer, a type that usually remains…
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