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  • Deaths from Karachi rains rise to 8 as Sindh braces for more downpours in coming days – Pakistan

    Deaths from Karachi rains rise to 8 as Sindh braces for more downpours in coming days – Pakistan

    The death toll from yesterday’s heavy rainfall in Karachi rose to eight on Wednesday as the city’s residents struggled with flooded roads and Sindh braced for more downpours in the coming days.

    The rains severely strained Karachi’s fragile infrastructure, causing stormwater drains and sewers to burst, along with disrupting industrial operations across the economic hub. Several areas experienced hours-long power and internet services outage. Due to the severity of the situ­ation, the provincial admin­­istration anno­unced a public holiday in the city today.

    According to separate statements issued by Karachi Rescue 1122, two more people died in rain-related incidents, in addition to yesterday’s six deaths.

    Edhi Marine Service volunteers recovered the body of a 50-year-old man, identified as Abbas Mohsin, who went missing in a nullah near the Gurumandir area yesterday, Rescue 1122 said. His body was taken to Civil Hospital Karachi (CHK).

    In Defence Housing Authority’s (DHA) Phase 5, Edhi Marine Service volunteers recovered the body of 19-year-old motorcycle rider Yasir, after being informed about an electrocution incident. The man’s body was shifted to the Jinnah Postgraduate Medical College (JPMC).

    A man and a woman were injured after part of an old building collapsed in Ranchore Line area, a statement from Edhi Rescue service said. Both were taken to CHK in an ambulance.

    The Sindh government has ordered all private and public educational institutions across the city to remain closed today, after Karachi Mayor Murtaza Wahab declared a rain emergency.

    Rainwater was still accumulated on some roads near I. I. Chundrigar, as Karachi witnessed sunny skies with no further rain so far.

    This Google Map screengrab shows road blockades across Karachi on Aug 20, 2025 as of 12:20pm, a day after heavy rainfall led to flooding in various areas.

    Yesterday’s rains severely flooded Karachi’s major arteries, including Sharea Faisal, M.A. Jinnah Road, and I.I. Chundrigarh Road, with hundreds of cars and motorcycles submerged and commuters stuck in traffic jams for several hours. Many had to wade through waist-deep water in the business district as they tried to return home.

    Shortly after the heavy rains hit the city, power outages swept across the city, plunging several areas into darkness. Even upscale neigh­bourhoods, such as DHA and Clifton, were severely affected, with rainwater flooding homes and adding to the residents’ misery.

    The domestic and international flight operations at Jinnah International Airport were also affected, with the Pakistan Aviation Authority (PAA) confirming that several flights were either delayed, cancelled or diverted to an alternative airport due to inclement weather.

    Among six people who died yesterday were four members of a family who lost their lives after the walls of a house in Gulistan-i-Jauhar’s Block-12 collapsed during the heavy rain. According to a JPMC statement, a boy aged between two to four years and a six to seven-year-old girl were among the deceased, while a fifth relative was injured.

    In another similar incident in Orangi Town, an eight-year-old child lost his life. An unidentified man, aged 20-24 years, died in a suspected electrocution case in DHA’s Phase 7.

    Power restored in various areas: KE

    In an update at 2:15am, K-Electric spokesperson Imran Rana said efforts were underway to restore power supply in affected areas after getting safety clearance from on-ground teams as accumlulated rainwater recedes.

    “K-Electric’s generation, transmission, and distribution systems remain stable after the torrential monsoon rains, and power supply continues across the city through more than 1,700 feeders,” the statement on Rana’s X said.

    Areas in which power had been restored, as per KE, included North Nazimabad’s Block L and M; Askari 5; Malir Cantt Sector J; Orangi Town; Shamsi Colony; Feroz Shah Colony; Bangla Bazaar; Sectors 14-A, B, C, D, E and F; Pak Colony; F.B. Area Block 10, 11 and 14; Sarhad Colony; and Naubahar Colony.

    Power had also been restored in Badar Commercial’s Street 2, 6, 9 and 12; Zamzama Commercial; Azam Basti; DHA Phase 5; Clifton Block 2 and 9; Gulistan-i-Johar’s Block 15 and 17; City Railway Colony; Defence; Dhoraji; CP Berar; Faran Society; Zamzama Commercial; and Azam Basti.

    Rana said fuel supply disruptions across the city were also impacting the movement of KE vehicles for the restoration work.

    More rains expected in Sindh, Balochistan

    The Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) has forecast torrential rains in Sindh, parts of Balochistan, and other regions of the country in the coming days, advising the provincial disaster management authorities to make necessary arrangements.

    According to the PMD, strong monsoon currents from the Arabian Sea and Bay of Bengal are continuously penetrating the country, particularly the southern parts.

    Under the influence of these conditions, widespread rain-wind/thundershowers with scattered heavy falls, at times very heavy, are expected in Karachi, Mithi, Tharparkar, Umerkot, Mirpurkhas, Hyderabad, Shaheed Benazirabad, Thatta, Badin, Sajawal, Tando Allahyar, Tando Muhammad Khan, Sanghar and Jamshoro.

    Scattered showers are likely in Sukkur, Larkana, Khairpur, and Jacobabad till August 22 with occasional gaps.

    In Balochistan, rain-wind/thundershowers with scattered heavy falls are expected in Barkhan, Musakhel, Loralai, Sibi, Zhob, Qila Saifullah, Khuzdar, Lasbela, Awaran, Kech, Gwadar, and Panjgur till August 22 with occasional gaps.

    The Met Office warned that torrential rains may cause urban flooding in low-lying areas of Sindh, including Karachi, Thatta, Badin, Sajawal, Tharparkar, Umer Kot, Mirpurkhas, Hyderabad, Shaheed Benazirabad, Tando Allahyar, Tando Muhammad Khan, Sanghar, and Jamshoro.


    This is a developing story that is being updated as the situation evolves. Initial reports in the media can sometimes be inaccurate. We will strive to ensure timeliness and accuracy by relying on credible sources, such as concerned, qualified authorities and our staff reporters.

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  • Microsoft releases emergency updates to fix Windows recovery – BleepingComputer

    1. Microsoft releases emergency updates to fix Windows recovery  BleepingComputer
    2. Microsoft releases Windows 11 KB5066189 (23H2), Windows 10 KB5066188 with Recovery fixes  windowslatest.com
    3. Phison Responds to Windows 11 24H2 Update Crashing SSDs  TechPowerUp
    4. Latest Windows update is borking storage drives for some users  PCWorld
    5. Latest Windows Security Update Can Botch Device Recovery, Reinstall Options  PCMag

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  • Audit reveals Jazz overcharged subscribers by Rs6.58 billion in FY24

    Audit reveals Jazz overcharged subscribers by Rs6.58 billion in FY24

    ISLAMABAD:

    Pakistan’s telecommunication sector has long been a competitive and rapidly evolving industry, where consumer protection has remained critical. However, an audit report, by the Auditor General Pakistan (AGP), released this week has cast a dark shadow over the largest player in the market, Jazz, revealing how the telecom giant overcharged its subscribers by an alarming Rs6.58 billion during the fiscal year 2023-24.

    This hefty sum was collected by Jazz, despite its billing practices clearly violating the tariffs approved by the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA). What’s more concerning is the lack of effective oversight by PTA, which, despite being the regulatory body, failed to prevent the overcharging, leaving millions of consumers at the mercy of an unchecked pricing system. This development raises significant questions not just about the practices of Jazz but about the functioning of Pakistan’s telecom industry as a whole.

    According to the report, Jazz’s billing practices violated the Pakistan Telecommunication (Re-Organization) Act, 1996, and the Telecom Consumer Protection Regulations, 2009, which require operators to charge only the rates that have been formally approved by PTA.

    “Audit observed that Jazz overcharged its customers above the rates approved by the Authority,” said a copy of the available Audit Report on the accounts of public sector organisations (Telecommunication Sector) for the Audit Year 2024-25.

    A comparative analysis of selected weekly and monthly packages showed that Jazz charged higher-than-approved rates across multiple bundles, extracting a total of Rs 6.583 billion in excess payments from consumers during the year.

    For instance, the operator charged Rs1,043 for its “Monthly Super Duper” package against the approved rate of Rs955, and Rs1,739 for the “Monthly Freedom” package instead of Rs1,652. In some cases, such as the “Monthly YouTube & Social Offer,” consumers were billed Rs 434 against an approved rate of Rs 348, resulting in overcharging worth over Rs 2.12 billion on that package alone.

    Audit authorities have held both Jazz and PTA responsible. The report stated that the overbilling “indicated poor regulatory oversight of PTA,” as the regulator not only failed to enforce approved tariffs but also issued blanket permission allowing a quarterly price increase of up to 15 percent.

    According to the audit report, the matter was reported to the management and PAO during November 2024.

    Following which, it was replied that because telecom is a de-regulated industry, PTA only looks after competition and avoids predatory pricing by SMP (Significant Market Power) operators, allowing other operators to control the Average Revenue Per User (ARPU) of operators, which is already the least in the world and the region.

    The PTA granted Jazz approval to increase the prices of its packages in two separate instances. The first approval was issued on February 12, 2024, and the second one on August 12, 2024.

    Under these approvals, Jazz was allowed to increase the prices of its packages by up to 15% every quarter. This means that for each quarter (a three-month period), Jazz had the authority to raise its prices by a maximum of 15%. Additionally, Jazz was also allowed to reduce the incentives (benefits) offered in its packages by up to 5%. For example, this could involve reducing data limits, talk time, or other benefits that come with the package.

    However, Jazz had to inform the PTA about these price increases and incentive reductions before actually implementing them. This was a requirement to ensure that the PTA was aware of and kept track of these changes.

    The approval allowed Jazz to make these price adjustments during two specific periods: from February to June 2024 and from August to December 2024.

    In accordance with the PTA’s approval, Jazz went ahead and raised the prices of its packages on November 12, 2024. Jazz informed the PTA about this increase, as required, in a letter issued on that same day.

    PTA, in its response, also claimed that the telecom industry operates under a deregulated framework where it primarily ensures fair competition rather than strict tariff enforcement.

    It further argued that operators were granted leeway to adjust prices by up to 15 percent per quarter and reduce incentives by 5 percent, subject only to intimation to the Authority. Jazz had, in fact, informed PTA of certain price hikes through a letter dated November 12, 2024.

    However, the audit dismissed this justification as “untenable,” after having gone through the proposals submitted by Jazz to PTA, stressing that such blanket approvals were contrary to the spirit of consumer protection laws. “The Authority’s failure to regulate these increases has directly burdened consumers,” the report noted.

    The matter was also discussed at the Departmental Accounts Committee (DAC) meeting held on December 26, 2024, where PTA was directed to furnish the complete record of tariff revisions approved for Jazz. However, the regulator failed to provide the requisite documentation by the time the report was finalised.

    In its response to the report, Jazz has also shared its official version with Profit:

    “Jazz is a responsible corporate entity and has consistently operated in full compliance with Pakistan’s regulatory framework. All tariffs and services are launched only after formal approvals by the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA), in accordance with clearly defined processes.

    We are reviewing the observations shared in the audit report on the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) for Audit Year 2024–25. We remain confident that Jazz has acted lawfully and transparently at every step, in full alignment with PTA’s rules and regulatory procedures, including those related to tariff approvals and mandated contributions.

    We trust that the matter will be reviewed in the context of regulatory facts, documented approvals, and institutional roles.”

    Meanwhile, the audit has now recommended a thorough inquiry into the matter, implementation of DAC directives, and the fixation of responsibility on officials at fault for allowing the operator to impose unauthorised charges on millions of subscribers.

    “Audit recommends implementation of DAC directives, besides inquiry into the matter and fixation of responsibility on the person(s) at fault,” said the audit report of AGP.

    It is pertinent to mention that with over 190 million mobile subscribers nationwide, the telecom sector is one of the most revenue-generating industries in Pakistan. Meanwhile, Jazz commands close to 40% of Pakistan’s mobile subscriber market, serving more than 73 million users nationwide, making it the country’s largest telecom operator by a considerable margin. Its market dominance has been further reinforced by Telenor’s recent exit, which reduces meaningful competition in the sector and leaves the industry concentrated among just a few major players.

    In such a low-competition environment, operators like Jazz can exert significant influence over pricing, service offerings, and revenue streams, creating conditions where consumer exploitation—such as the Rs6.58 billion overcharging uncovered in the audit—becomes possible.

    The audit highlights how regulatory lapses, combined with a deregulated pricing framework and a lack of competitive pressure, can allow a dominant operator to bypass safeguards designed to protect millions of subscribers. While Jazz continues to consolidate its position as a market leader, this incident underscores the urgent need for PTA and policymakers to strengthen oversight mechanisms, enforce tariff compliance, and ensure that dominance in a critical sector does not translate into unchecked power at the expense of public interest.

    These revelations have highlighted not just the unchecked profiteering by private operators but also the PTA’s failure to act as an effective guardian of consumer rights as the findings of AGP have underscored mounting concerns over regulatory lapses in Pakistan’s telecom sector, where consumers remain vulnerable to unilateral price hikes despite legal safeguards.


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  • France-based Kashmiris J&K forum condemns Indian ban on 25 books on Kashmir’s freedom struggle

    France-based Kashmiris J&K forum condemns Indian ban on 25 books on Kashmir’s freedom struggle

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    MIRPUR (AJK), Aug 20 (APP):Paris-based Chairman, Jammu and Kashmir Forum France, Chaudhry Naeem Akhtar, has strongly condemned the ban imposed by the occupying Indian forces on 25 prominent authors’ books on Kashmir in the Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK) state.

    In a statement released to the media, he stated that censorship and restrictions on democratic freedoms continued in the region.

    He expressed these views during a media talk.

    Terming the ban on books as irrational, unfortunate, and contrary to democratic values, he said, “We fail to understand what it is in these books that threatens the occupying Indian forces.

    He questioned, If the situation was truly normal, then why resort to censorship? He further added that history bears witness that bans on books often lead to their increased popularity. Ideas that are suppressed tend to become more deeply ingrained in public consciousness.

    Akhter also stated that this decision to ban books was a tyrannical attack on democratic rights and intellectual freedom. Particularly, the fact that this ban was imposed on the day marking six years since the abrogation of Article 370, makes it yet another symbol of injustice towards the Kashmiri people.

    He remarked that banning books was a failed attempt to erase history.

    Democracy thrived on the free exchange of ideas, he lamented.

    “Imposing a ban on books cannot erase history—it only fuels further division and alienation,” he said.

    He concluded by saying: Censorship does not silence ideas; it amplifies their echo”.

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  • Trump says US may provide air support to Ukraine as Nato leaders prepare to meet – Ukraine war live | Ukraine

    Trump says US may provide air support to Ukraine as Nato leaders prepare to meet – Ukraine war live | Ukraine

    Donald Trump says US may provide air support as part of peace deal to end Russia’s war in Ukraine

    The US president, Donald Trump, said on Tuesday his country may provide air support to back a Ukraine peace deal. Trump ruled out putting US troops on the ground in Ukraine, but said he might provide air support as part of a deal to end Russia’s war in the country. It comes a day after Trump pledged security guarantees to help end the war at an extraordinary White House summit. The path to peace remained uncertain as the US and allies prepared to work out what military support for Ukraine might include.

    “When it comes to security, (Europeans) are willing to put people on the ground. We’re willing to help them with things, especially, probably … by air,” Trump said in an interview with the Fox News “Fox & Friends” program.

    Nato military leaders were expected to meet on Wednesday to discuss Ukraine, with US Gen Dan Caine, the chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, expected to attend virtually, officials told Reuters.

    Also:

    • Putin has said Russia will not tolerate troops from the Nato alliance in Ukraine. He has also shown no sign of backing down from demands for territory, including land not under Russia’s military control, after his summit with Trump on Friday in Alaska.

    • Later, in an interview with radio host Mark Levin, Trump characterised his negotiating style in trying to end the war as “probably instinct more than process.”

    • Following Monday’s meeting, Russia launched its biggest air assault in more than a month on Ukraine, with 270 drones and 10 missiles launched, the Ukrainian air force said. The energy ministry said the strikes caused big fires at energy facilities in the central Poltava region, home to Ukraine’s only oil refinery.

    • Oil is flowing to Slovakia again via the Druzhba pipeline, the Slovak economy ministry said late on Tuesday, after a Ukrainian drone strike on an oil pumping station in Russia’s Tambov region cut off supplies. Ukraine has stepped up attacks on Russia’s energy infrastructure, a key conduit for generating money for Kremlin’s war efforts, with oil and gas sales accounting for a quarter of Russia’s total state budget proceeds.

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    Updated at 

    Key events

    Russia launched a “massive drone strike” on the southern Ukrainian region of Odesa, injuring one person and causing a large fire at a fuel and energy facility, Ukraine’s State Emergency Service said on Wednesday.

    Administration of the Izmail district in the Odesa region said on social media that port infrastructure in the city was damaged.

    A firefighter works at the site of a fuel storage facility hit by a Russian drone strike, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Odesa region, Ukraine August 20, 2025. Photograph: State Emergency Service Of Ukraine/Reuters
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    Russia’s air defence units destroyed 42 Ukrainian drones overnight, Russia’s RIA news agency reported on Wednesday, citing data from the Russian defence ministry.

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    Donald Trump says US may provide air support as part of peace deal to end Russia’s war in Ukraine

    The US president, Donald Trump, said on Tuesday his country may provide air support to back a Ukraine peace deal. Trump ruled out putting US troops on the ground in Ukraine, but said he might provide air support as part of a deal to end Russia’s war in the country. It comes a day after Trump pledged security guarantees to help end the war at an extraordinary White House summit. The path to peace remained uncertain as the US and allies prepared to work out what military support for Ukraine might include.

    “When it comes to security, (Europeans) are willing to put people on the ground. We’re willing to help them with things, especially, probably … by air,” Trump said in an interview with the Fox News “Fox & Friends” program.

    Nato military leaders were expected to meet on Wednesday to discuss Ukraine, with US Gen Dan Caine, the chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, expected to attend virtually, officials told Reuters.

    Also:

    • Putin has said Russia will not tolerate troops from the Nato alliance in Ukraine. He has also shown no sign of backing down from demands for territory, including land not under Russia’s military control, after his summit with Trump on Friday in Alaska.

    • Later, in an interview with radio host Mark Levin, Trump characterised his negotiating style in trying to end the war as “probably instinct more than process.”

    • Following Monday’s meeting, Russia launched its biggest air assault in more than a month on Ukraine, with 270 drones and 10 missiles launched, the Ukrainian air force said. The energy ministry said the strikes caused big fires at energy facilities in the central Poltava region, home to Ukraine’s only oil refinery.

    • Oil is flowing to Slovakia again via the Druzhba pipeline, the Slovak economy ministry said late on Tuesday, after a Ukrainian drone strike on an oil pumping station in Russia’s Tambov region cut off supplies. Ukraine has stepped up attacks on Russia’s energy infrastructure, a key conduit for generating money for Kremlin’s war efforts, with oil and gas sales accounting for a quarter of Russia’s total state budget proceeds.

    Share

    Updated at 

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  • AI ‘immune system’ Phoebe lands backing from Google arm | Money News

    AI ‘immune system’ Phoebe lands backing from Google arm | Money News

    An AI start-up which claims to act as an ‘immune system’ for software has landed $17m (£12.6m) in initial funding from backers including the ventures arm of Alphabet-owned Google.

    Sky News has learnt that Phoebe, which uses AI agents to continuously monitor and respond to live system data in order to identify and fix software glitches, will announce this week one of the largest seed funding rounds for a UK-based company this year.

    The funding is led by GV – formerly Google Ventures – and Cherry Ventures, and will be announced to coincide with the public launch of Phoebe’s platform.

    It is expected to be announced publicly on Thursday.

    Phoebe was founded by Matt Henderson and James Summerfield, the former chief executive and chief information officer of Stripe Europe, last year.

    The duo sold their first start-up, Rangespan, to Google a decade earlier.

    Their latest venture is motivated by data suggesting that the world’s roughly 40 million software developers spend up to 30% of their time reacting to bugs and errors.

    More on Artificial Intelligence

    Financial losses to companies from software outages are said to have reached $400bn globally last year, according to the company.

    Phoebe’s swarms of AI agents sift through siloed data to identify errors in real time, which it says reduces the time it takes to resolve them by up to 90%.

    “High-severity incidents can make or break big customer relationships, and numerous smaller problems drain engineering productivity,” Mr Henderson said.

    “Software monitoring tools exist, but they aren’t very intelligent and require people to spend a lot of time working out what is wrong and what to do about it.”

    The backing from blue-chip investors such as GV and Cherry Ventures underlines the level of interest in AI-powered software remediation businesses.

    Roni Hiranand, an executive at GV, said: “AI has transformed how code is written, but software reliability has not kept pace.

    “Phoebe is building a missing layer of contextual intelligence that can help both human and AI engineers avoid software failures.

    “We love the boldness of the team’s vision for a software immune system that pre-emptively fixes problems.”

    Phoebe has signed up customers including Trainline, the rail booking app.

    Jay Davies, head of engineering for reliability and operations at Trainline, said Phoebe had “already had a real impact on how we investigate and remediate incidents”.

    “Work that used to take us hours to piece together can now take minutes and that matters when you’re running critical services at our scale.”

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  • Tidal Forces and Orbital Evolution of Habitable Zone Planets

    Tidal Forces and Orbital Evolution of Habitable Zone Planets

    How do tidal forces determine a planet’s orbital evolution, specifically planets in the habitable zone? This is what a recently submitted study hopes to address as an international team of researchers investigated how tidal forces far more powerful than experienced on Earth could influence orbital evolution of habitable zone planets with highly eccentric orbits around low-mass stars. This study has the potential to help researchers better understand the formation and evolution of exoplanets, specifically regarding where we could find life beyond Earth.

    For the study, the researchers used a series of computer models to simulate tidal forces on Earth and three exoplanets: Proxima Centauri b, GJ 3323b, and TRAPPIST-1e, which are located approximately 4.24, 17.5, and 40 light-years from Earth, respectively. As noted, the researchers analyzed data from planets orbiting low-mass stars, and the mass of each planet’s star compared to our Sun is 0.12, 0.17, and 0.08, respectively.

    Additionally, the observed eccentricities of the planets are approximately 0.35, 0.23, and 0.0051. For context, Earth’s observed eccentricity is 0.0167. One of the most important aspects of these planets is their semi-major axes (the distance from its star) are each much smaller than the Earth at 0.0485, 0.0328, and 0.0282 astronomical units (AU), respectively. For context, Earth is 1 AU from our Sun.

    In the end, the models revealed that tidal force energy exerted on planets with eccentric orbits could result in their orbits being manipulated 1-2 orders of magnitude greater than Earth. Along with manipulating orbital evolution, the increased tidal forces could also influence planetary surface geography.

    The study notes in its conclusions, “Under this condition, it is likely that all continents above the sea level would be easily eroded away by ocean tides, leaving no continent such that the planet would be more like an aqua-planet if the planet still has oceans. These tides may dramatically influence orbital evolution, climate, habitability, and observational features. The strong ocean tides can induce large tidal energy dissipation and can also enhance deep ocean mixing, oceanic overturning circulation and thereby equator-to-pole ocean heat transport. For asynchronously rotating planets with small eccentricities, the ocean tides would be much weaker but is still nonnegligible and comparable to that on Earth.”

    The reason tidal forces have been studied for exoplanets is because the former is a common occurrence throughout our solar system, most notably between the Earth and its Moon. While Earth is approximately 81 times as massive as the Moon, the latter is large enough and orbits close enough to exert its gravitational pull on the former. This results in daily water bulging on opposite sides of the Earth, which is used primarily by the boating and fishing industries to determine the most opportune times for launching and recovering ships.

    Beyond the Earth, tidal forces are observed between Jupiter and two of its Galilean moons, Io and Europa. As the much smaller Io orbit the much more massive Jupiter, for former’s eccentric orbit takes it closer and farther from Jupiter, resulting in Jupiter’s gravitational pull being greater and weaker, respectively. Over millions of years, this constant flexing and compressing of Io results in frictional heating of its interior, resulting in Io being the most volcanically active planetary body in the solar system.

    Like Io, Europa’s orbit is also eccentric, but it is also receiving a gravitational pull from Ganymede, which orbits beyond Europa. These tidal forces result in Europa possessing a large liquid water ocean, which has become a target for astrobiologists with NASA’s Europa Clipper spacecraft currently en route to Europa to better understand the moon’s habitability.

    As this study demonstrates, the phenomenon of tidal forces extends far beyond our solar system, potentially influencing how planets form and evolve and the plausible life that could exist there. As the number of known habitable zone exoplanets continues to increase, so will our knowledge about their formation and evolution, and whether they have the ingredients for life as we know it.

    What new discoveries between tidal forces and habitable zone planets will researchers make in the coming years and decades? Only time will tell, and this is why we science!

    As always, keep doing science & keep looking up!

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  • Charging infrastructure needed to support India’s full transition to battery electric trucks by 2050 – International Council on Clean Transportation

    1. Charging infrastructure needed to support India’s full transition to battery electric trucks by 2050  International Council on Clean Transportation
    2. Financing models driving electric commercial vehicle (e-CV) penetration in India  EVreporter •
    3. Smarter Fleet Management Emerges As Key To India’s EV Transition  thedailyjagran.com
    4. Cars are getting electric! Are e-buses the next big leap? Inside India’s push for carbon-free transit  WION
    5. Secrets to building winning electric vehicle fleets for trucks and buses  EVreporter •

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  • Fluminense goalkeeper Fabio breaks Peter Shilton appearance record

    Fluminense goalkeeper Fabio breaks Peter Shilton appearance record

    Brazilian goalkeeper Fabio Deivson Lopes Maciel has broken the record held by former England international Peter Shilton for most competitive appearances in world football, says his club Fluminense.

    The 44-year-old made his 1,391st appearance in the last 16 of the Copa Sudamericana – the South American equivalent of the Europa League – beating America de Cali 2-0 at the Maracana.

    Fabio made his professional debut in 1997 and has spent his entire career in Brazil, representing Uniao Bandeirante, Atletico Paranaense, Vasco da Gama, Cruzeiro and Fluminense.

    Most of his appearances came at Cruzeiro (976) between 2005 and 2022 while he made 150 for Vasco da Gama and 30 for Uniao Bandeirante.

    His record-breaking outing on Tuesday was his 235th match for Fluminense.

    According to the Guinness Book of Records, Shilton held the record with 1,390 appearances but he claims he has played 1,387 (three fewer), external.

    But Fabio, who has never played for his country despite winning the Under-17 World Cup in 1997, is only being recognised by his club as the outright record holder now that he has passed the 1,390 tally.

    There were questions about the actual number Fabio was chasing.

    Shilton, now 75, is recorded as having played 1,249 games in his club career and a record 125 England appearances, taking him to 1,374 appearances.

    According to England Football Online, external, Shilton played 13 times for England Under-23s, which would take us to the 1,387 tally Shilton believes he has.

    Whether the 13 should count as a senior appearance is up for debate but Fluminense have now claimed the record for their goalkeeper, external.

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  • Honda Establishes New Subsidiary in India for Retail Financing Services

    Honda Establishes New Subsidiary in India for Retail Financing Services

    TOKYO, Japan, August 20, 2025 – Honda Motor Co., Ltd. (Honda) today announced the recent establishment of a new company in India, Honda Finance India Private Ltd., (“Honda Finance India”) that will offer customers retail sales financing services including loans and lease sales options for Honda products in India.

    In India, where further growth of the motorcycle and automobile markets is expected, the number of customers using loans to purchase motorcycles and cars is also expected to increase. Until now, retail sales financing services in the Indian market have mainly been provided by local financial institutions. However, in light of market trends, Honda will further strengthen its business in India by offering its own sales financing services through a local subsidiary in India.

    Honda Finance India Private Ltd. will apply for a Non-Banking Financial Company (NBFC) license to conduct financial services business in India. After obtaining the license, the company will begin offering retail sales financing services to help customers finance their purchase of motorcycles, automobiles and services provided by Honda.

    Financial services business has been one of the main business areas of Honda, and the company has established local subsidiaries specializing in retail sales financing services in Japan and various countries in key regions such as North America, and Europe. With the establishment of the new company, India became the ninth country where Honda has a local subsiary to offer financial services. 

    Honda will work to establish long-term relationships with customers by offering flexible financial services tailored to the specific needs of customers in each region. Moreover, in anticipation of the global expansion of software-defined vehicle (SDV) sales in the future, Honda is looking into opportunities to offer new financial services designed to increase customer satisfaction and the value of the customer experience using various data from Honda SDVs. With such new services, Honda will further strengthen its financial services business not only in India but across the globe.  

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