United Airlines has halted flights at major airports across the US over a “technology issue”, according to the company.
A ground stop was issued for the company’s mainline flights from departure airports, causing issues at airports including Chicago, Denver, Houston, San Francisco and New Jersey, the US Federal Aviation Administration’s website shows.
“We expect additional flight delays this evening as we work through this issue,” United told the BBC’s US partner CBS News.
“Safety is our top priority, and we’ll work with our customers to get them to their destinations,” the company said.
The BBC has contacted United Airlines for comment.
Flights that are already in the air will continue to their destination, the company told CBS News. It added that regional flights were not impacted but could be delayed because of traffic jams from the ground stops.
Over 700 United flights had been delayed as of 21:00 EDT (2:00 BST), according to flight tracking site FlightAware.
A study by the Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS) has called for urgent policy reforms to unlock the full potential of Pakistan’s gig and digital economy, using foodpanda as a case study. The report, titled “Economic Impact Assessment of foodpanda in Pakistan”, not only quantifies the platform’s substantial economic contribution – estimated at $1.2 billion for 2023-2024 – but also underscores the need for a more supportive regulatory environment.
The report highlights the platform’s expansive role in job creation, SME enablement, and digital inclusion through its network of over 50,000 registered riders and partnerships with 13,000+ restaurants, many of which operate in the informal sector.
While the findings underline foodpanda’s growing influence on Pakistan’s gig and digital economy, the study emphasises the urgent need for regulatory reforms to maintain and expand the impact of such platforms. LUMS recommends that the government preserve flexibility in labour laws to support gig and freelance workers who value autonomy and flexible hours. The study cautions that imposing rigid structures could reduce employment opportunities, particularly for youth and low-income groups.
The report also stresses that informal food vendors should not be excluded from the digital economy, urging the government instead to collaborate with food delivery platforms to gradually formalise these businesses without disrupting their operations or incomes.
Internet infrastructure was highlighted as another major concern. Since digital platforms rely on reliable and fast connectivity, service disruptions lead to order delays, customer dissatisfaction, and financial losses. The report urges the government to invest in broadband access, infrastructure upgrades, and incentives for private sector investment, especially in underserved areas.
LUMS also flagged concerns over the proposed Personal Data Protection Bill. Provisions for local data storage, strict consent rules, and cross-border data restrictions could raise costs for digital platforms that use global cloud services. The report warns these rules may deter global investors and hinder scalability.
The study also proposes a one-window licensing system for delivery riders. This would cover ID verification, vehicle checks, and licensing under one platform to streamline compliance, reduce administrative burdens, and enhance safety and accountability in the sector.
To support the wider e-commerce ecosystem, LUMS recommends reducing import tariffs on technology and providing targeted incentives to local digital startups.
The study found strong ripple effects across food, hospitality, manufacturing, transport, and retail. In FY 2023-24, foodpanda enabled Rs75 billion in restaurant revenue, created jobs, contributed Rs9.76 billion in taxes, and empowered 50,000+ riders and entrepreneurs through fintech.
If you’ve been on the internet lately, chances are you’ve heard an intriguing – and perhaps even startling – descriptor applied to men’s eyewear: “slutty little glasses”.
Coined by online creator and culture critic Blakely Thornton, the term was earlier used to describe the fashionable wire-framed specs sported by actor Jonathan Bailey’s character in the film Jurassic World Rebirth. Lately it’s been applied to a broader range of men’s glasses.
From nerds and nice guys to being the talk of the town, men’s spectacles are having a moment.
But men have worn glasses for both function and fashion for hundreds of years. Whether one lens or two, perched precariously on the nose, balanced on the ears or held in front of the eyes by a handle, eyewear has long been designed not just for seeing but also to be seen.
Eyewear for function
The earliest spectacles may have dated to the late 1200s, though their inventor remains unknown. An early 14th century sermon by a Dominican friar mentions how:
It is not yet twenty years since there was found the art of making eyeglasses which make for good vision, one of the best arts and most necessary that the world has.
Magnifying lenses continue to rank among the top inventions of all time.
Early eyewear aimed to provide sharper clarity to those who pored over texts and manuscripts as scholars of science and religion.
Sharper vision also aided artisans in a time before machine manufacturing. Learning and productivity boomed as people’s working lives were extended, thanks to this groundbreaking invention.
Eyewear and fashion
Eyewear soon moved through a cavalcade of changing forms.
Pince-nez experienced a surge in popularity in the 19th century. They were distinguished by their “pincer” that fastened them to the bridge of the nose.
There’s nothing new about men’s eyewear as fashion, as this portrait of a 19th century man in Victoria shows. State Library of Victoria
Lorgnettes, spectacles mounted on a handle, were carried by dandies – exquisitely dressed men of the late 18th and early 19th centuries.
Opera glasses rose as a fashionable and practical accessory at a similar time. They helped with long distance vision, helping patrons see performers on the stage.
The monocle, a single lens tucked under the eyebrow, became a symbol of class and power in the 19th century. The monocle also flourished as a favourite lesbian fashion adornment in 1920s Paris, the decade in which the Le Monocle nightclub opened on the Left Bank.
And perhaps most fashionable of all, sunglasses were also adopted as accessories from the 1920s onwards by celebrities and style icons.
Men’s eyewear has had big and bold public moments. Legendary musician Sir Elton John’s wacky and wonderful collection – of hearts, stars and coloured lenses – reportedly numbers 250,000.
One of Australia’s best-known wearers of flamboyant frames was Barry Humphries’ Dame Edna Everage character, who was instantly recognisable for extravagant diamanté-studded butterfly glasses.
Other public figures – Buddy Holly, John Lennon, Tupac Shakur, and many more – have driven big moments in men’s eyewear fashion history. Even fourth century priest and translator, Saint Jerome, has been painted (centuries after his death) sporting glasses that could pass as fashionable today.
Wisdom, power and vanity
In their innovation, expense and materials, spectacles became a symbol of status. The powerful Medici family were known to be myopic (short-sighted) and wore the best glasses made in 15th century Florence.
But as glasses could also draw attention to a vision impairment, some men were reluctant to wear them in public. Despite French author Victor Hugo’s poor eyesight, he preferred not to wear glasses when possible. Hugo removed them when sitting for portraits.
Glasses have also long been used as a form of disguise. The female version of the glasses-as-disguise trope is littered across film and television. A character’s beauty – rather than her power – is revealed when she removes her glasses. Think Anne Hathaway’s character Mia in The Princess Diaries, or Tara Morice in Baz Luhrmann’s hit Strictly Ballroom.
The mild-mannered journalist Clark Kent wore glasses as part of his disguise. His superhero alter ego Superman had no need for them (and the internet has also applied the “slutty little glasses” treatment to the most recent Superman film).
Glasses have represented wisdom, intelligence and learning from their early uses by scholars. This perhaps explains why glasses have been framed as nerdy for so long.
But what makes them ‘slutty’?
Wire-framed glasses on men might still be coded as nerdy, but there’s no denying “slutty little glasses” are having a fashion moment – and in doing so, may be challenging contemporary masculine ideals.
Not all who wear them will look like Jonathan Bailey or Superman star David Corenswet. But “slutty little glasses” unsettle the idea that men in specs are weak or unattractive. Instead they suggest something different.
They’re “slutty” because they make men look thoughtful and intelligent, with their attraction being brain over, or as well as, brawn. As culture writer Meg Walters puts it:
It gestures toward the female gaze and indeed the queer gaze. “Slutty little glasses” speak to the girls and gays because they present us with a different type of male hero, one who subverts the traditional tropes of masculinity by finding strength in his intellect and his openness rather than just his machismo.
Researchers from China Mobile published a research paper in Frontiers of Information Technology & Electronic Engineering 2024, Vol. 25, No. 5. The paper first adopts a reputation model based on the beta distribution function to measure the credibility of computing and network resource providers (CNRPs) and proposes a performance-based reputation update model . Secondly, it formalizes the problem into a constrained multi-objective optimization problem and uses a modified fast and elitist non-dominated sorting genetic algorithm (NSGA-II) to find feasible solutions, providing flexibility for matching decisions between users and resource providers.
In the industry, several approaches and methodologies have been proposed for optimization scheduling in computing and network convergence, focusing on modeling and solving resource scheduling optimization problems in the multi-cloud model through multi-dimensional resource constraints . At present, there are some studies on multi-objective optimization in the industry; reputation systems have also been widely studied in multiple domains, and beta distribution is often used in reputation modeling, but there are few studies on reputation-based scheduling in computing force networks (CFNs).
The reputation-based joint optimization framework is applied to a many-to-many system, where the CFN scheduling center connects users and CNRPs. A reputation model is introduced to evaluate the performance reliability of CNRPs, and a comprehensive evaluation model based on performance and reputation is constructed. The scheduling decision process is formulated as a constrained multi-objective optimization problem to optimize user satisfaction and average resource utilization.
The paper details the process of solving multi-objective optimization problems in CFNs based on NSGA-II, including steps such as initializing parameters, generating populations, evaluating, sorting, calculating crowding distance, selecting, crossover and mutation, and generating new populations, and finally obtaining a set of optimal solutions for users to make decisions.
The performance of the reputation-based NSGA-II in solving multi-objective optimization problems in a many-to-many CFN environment is evaluated. The impact of different parameters on average user satisfaction and resource utilization is analyzed, and the results show that the proposed reputation-based NSGA-II can achieve a balance between average user satisfaction and resource utilization . Considering the reputation of CNRPs, the proposed model, problem formulation, and NSGA-II can effectively obtain the Pareto set to jointly optimize user satisfaction and resource utilization.
Finally, the paper proposes that in the future, the fairness issue in the many-to-many matching process can be considered, and CNRPs with fewer cumulative service times can be selected while meeting user needs. Additionally, based on the service performance of CNRPs, the incentive mechanism in CFNs can be considered to decide whether to issue incentives to motivate more CNRPs to participate and promote the development of CFNs.
The paper “Reputation-based joint optimization of user satisfaction and resource utilization in a computing force network” authored by Yuexia FU, Jing WANG, Lu LU, Qinqin TANG and Sheng ZHANG. Full text of the open access paper: https://doi.org/10.1631/FITEE.2100398.
Frustrated by years of missed diagnoses and medical dismissal, Australian women now have a powerful ally in Ovum, a breakthrough app using artificial intelligence to turn symptom tracking and health insights into action, advocacy, and better outcomes.
Image Credit: Ovum
For too long, women have been suffering in silence. More than half of Australian women suffer from a chronic health condition and wait years to be diagnosed after being ignored or dismissed by health professionals.
An Australian first women’s health AI partner, Ovum, is set to fundamentally change the game, disrupting the health system and empowering women with the information to advocate for their health.
Officially launching on the App Store, Ovum is powered by the Ovum Brain, an AI engine purpose-built to help women understand their body and advocate for it. Women log symptoms and lifestyle changes, and Ovum responds with personalised insights based on their health history and goals, helping them track their health as it evolves. It also integrates media reports and generates health summaries for women to take to their doctor.
Founder and CEO Dr Ariella Heffernan-Marks said women are waiting far too long to be diagnosed, and Ovum hopes to empower women to take control of their health journey. “It takes an average of six to eight years for women to be diagnosed with endometriosis. This happens because too often the medical system dismisses women,” she said.
Ovum was co-created with Nakatomi — Ovum’s day-one venture partner and one of the first investors, who helped validate, design, build, and launch the company and product. Earlier in the year, Ovum closed its raise of $1.7 million with backing by Nakatomi, Giant Leap, Antler, Alice Anderson Fund, and Wollemi Capital Group.
Dr Heffernan-Marks said Ovum, which has been nearly four years in the making, has been backed by data and insights from real women from the beginning.
“We have tested the app in the beta stage and have held two clinical trials at The Royal Hospital for Women and St George Hospital to understand the experiences of healthcare for women and how AI can increase preventative health behaviours.”
“Feedback has been overwhelmingly positive and my driving force, including ‘Everything that women have needed to track their health, feel empowered, and have ownership of their own data.’ I’m so proud to deliver an Australian first that genuinely supports women navigate their health.” Dr Heffernan-Marks said. Ovum will help to revolutionise the health system for women like Joyce Jaio. Joyce was told by a doctor she couldn’t be pregnant, only to find out later she was actually halfway through her pregnancy. “I had been to the doctor for symptoms. One of the symptoms was kicking in my stomach. I had done pregnancy tests and they came back negative. They dismissed this particular symptom and didn’t order a blood test. They told me I had postpartum depression.” Joyce explained. “That was when I realised the medical system was broken.”
Ovum draws from female-centric medical literature to understand and learn from a wide range of health factors, identifying patterns over time and providing timely, intuitive reminders when attention is needed.
Ovum Ambassador and Perimenopause advocate Grace Lam said that Ovum would have been invaluable when she was navigating one of the most challenging times in her life, battling perimenopause without support from her General Practitioner. “I thought doctors knew everything but my GP didn’t know much about perimenopause. Because I wasn’t sleeping at that point for three months, she gave me sleeping pills,” Ms Lamb said.
“I didn’t want to rely on the sleeping pills. That’s when I went down the rabbit role of perimenopause symptoms online … I learnt more about perimenopause online than from my doctor.”
With an ambitious mission of ending gender health inequity across Australia, Ovum is now available for a free trial on the App Store.
“This is just the beginning. Our mission is to ensure every woman has access to the personalised insights she needs to make confident decisions about her health, no matter her age, location, or background,” Dr Heffernan Marks said.
Experiencing complications during pregnancy is linked with a higher risk of stroke before age 50, according to a study published August 6, 2025, in Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. Researchers found female participants who had certain pregnancy complications were more likely to have an early stroke. These included preeclampsia, preterm birth, gestational diabetes, miscarriage and stillbirth.The study does not prove that pregnancy complications cause stroke. It only shows an association.
While the overall risk of stroke is still very low, our study found pregnancy complications may be an early warning sign of stroke risk-even before age 50. Knowing this history could help doctors identify those who may benefit from early prevention and cardiovascular care.”
Frank-Erik De Leeuw, MD, PhD, study author of Radboud University in Nijmegen, the Netherlands
The study included 1,072 female participants who experienced at least one pregnancy, including 358 who had an ischemic stroke, ages 18 to 49 years old, and 714 without stroke.
Researchers looked at how often certain pregnancy complications occurred in those who had strokes compared to those who did not. They included preeclampsia, which is high blood pressure during pregnancy, preterm birth before 37 weeks, small-for-gestational-age births, gestational diabetes and pregnancy loss, including miscarriage and stillbirth.
The findings indicate that 51% of those who had a stroke experienced at least one pregnancy complication compared to 31% of those without a stroke. Once researchers adjusted for the age of the participants at the time of the first pregnancy, they found that people who had a stroke were more than twice as likely to have at least one pregnancy complication than people without a stroke.
The strongest associations were seen in participants with a history of stillbirth, who were nearly five times more likely to have a stroke, however De Leeuw noted that the number of participants who reported a stillbirth was small. Those with a history of preeclampsia were about four times more likely, while those with preterm birth or small–for-gestational-age births had nearly three times the risk.
Certain complications – especially preeclampsia and preterm birth – were associated with strokes caused by large artery disease, a type often linked to atherosclerosis, which is a build-up of fatty deposits called plaque in the arteries.
“Doctors should ask about pregnancy history when assessing stroke risk,” De Leeuw said. “Our study suggests we may need to start thinking about cardiovascular prevention earlier in life-not just after menopause. Future studies should investigate the effects of lifestyle modification aimed at reducing cardiovascular risk in women with complications during pregnancy.”
A limitation of the study is data on some pregnancy complications were reported by the participants themselves and may not be as reliable as medical records. Researchers were also unable to adjust for all stroke risk factors, like high blood pressure or cholesterol.
It may have come down to a nervy tiebreaker, but the fairytale run of tennis phenom Victoria Mboko remains alive at the Canadian Open, with the 18-year-old rising star eking out a 1-6, 7-5, 7-6(4) victory over world no. 12 Elena Rybakina on Wednesday 6 August.
Playing with passion, grit and an undeniable flair, Mboko overcame a difficult first set to sneak past the experienced Kazakh player, winning the subsequent set and tiebreaker – much to the delight of an impassioned home crowd in Montreal.
The wild card entry turned giant slayer was all smiles following the victory, which guaranteed her a spot in her first-ever WTA-level final, where she’ll face the winner of the second semi-final match played between Naomi Osaka and Clara Tauson.
Rodrygo’s Real Madrid future is under scrutiny following a quiet Club World Cup showing, with growing speculation linking the Brazilian forward to PSG. Transfer expert Fabrizio Romano has now weighed in on the situation as the summer window heats up.
PSG’s position on Rodrygo remains somewhat murky. According to Josué Cassé of Foot Mercato, the Brazilian forward isn’t currently on their radar — a report that conflicts with Sky Sports Germany’s Florian Plettenberg, who also ruled out Tottenham Hotspur as a potential landing spot.
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Still, Plettenberg added that Liverpool and PSG monitor Rodrygo’s situation. PSG are said to be seriously interested and are in the market for a top young winger, though any potential move may hinge on how the transfer window plays out in the coming weeks.
Are PSG keen on Real Madrid standout?
Florencia Tan Jun/Getty Images
Romano reports that PSG will consider a move for Rodrygo if Bradley Barcola leaves, as he’s one of the names on their list. However, the Parisians have no plans to sell Barcola and would only consider it if he publicly says he wants to go. The club has already prepared a major contract extension to keep him.
Arsenal were previously linked with a move for Brazilian winger Rodrygo earlier this summer, with Liverpool and Tottenham also showing interest. But according to Spanish outlet AS, Rodrygo appears set on staying at the Bernabeu. He’s reportedly eager to fight for his place under incoming manager Xabi Alonso and believes he can make an impact alongside Real Madrid’s current attacking talent.
Many foods marketed as healthy can negatively impact gut health. A gastroenterologist warns against snack bars, sugar-free gums, and store-bought salad dressings due to hidden sugars, artificial sweeteners, and inflammatory oils. Flavored yogurts and granola are also culprits, while milk in coffee can cause discomfort for some.
Eating healthy foods is now considered more important than ever, as your overall health largely depends on it. But in the quest for nutritious foods, many fall for misleading marketing. Many foods marketed as ‘healthy’ can wreak havoc on your well-being, especially gut health. Dr. Saurabh Sethi, a California-based gastroenterologist, has now warned about some of the foods that are often assumed ‘healthy’, but aren’t. “I’m a gut doctor, and some foods may look harmless but silently disrupt your gut microbiome. Here’s what I skip and what I eat instead,” he said, sharing a list of foods. From milk to salad dressings, here are six foods you should avoid to protect your gut health. Snack bars
Snack bars, including protein bars, often masquerade as healthy options, but what we hardly notice is that they are ultra-processed and loaded with sugars, and additives. Dr. Sethi says they are nothing but ‘candy bars in disguise’. He stresses that these bars are loaded with emulsifiers, fake fiber, and seed oils. They destroy the healthy gut microbiome balance. Over time, these ingredients will leave you bloated and disrupt digestion. Dr. Sethi suggests swapping processed bars for a handful of nuts or fresh fruits. You can pair them with natural nut butter. These provide fiber, healthy fats, and nutrients that benefit the gut. Sugar-free gums
If you are reaching for sugar-free gums because you have cut sugar from your diet, it’s a mistake. Sugar-free gums are worse than the regular varieties because the former is loaded with artificial sweeteners, like sorbitol, which can wreak havoc. “They can trigger gas, bloating, and even diarrhea,” Dr. Sethi explains. That doesn’t mean you forget about refreshing your mouth. Consider using natural alternatives like fennel seeds after meals. “I take them daily,” the doctor said. Fennel seeds may also help digestion.Salad dressings
Do you buy salad dressings from stores? Well, it’s time to rethink your choice. Store-bought salad dressings may be convenient, and often come with bold claims like ‘healthy’, or ‘no trans fat’, but they are loaded with additives that harm your gut health. “Even ‘healthy’ ones are often full of inflammatory oils and added sugars,” Dr. Sethi says. What can you do? Make your salad dressing at home. Add ingredients like olive oil, lemon juice, mustard, and some fresh herbs, and enjoy a nutritious and healthy dressing for your salad. And it’s cheaper than the store-bought ones.Yogurts
We are obsessed with yogurts now, thanks to their influencers and wellness gurus. Yes, yogurts are good for your gut health, due to their probiotic content. However, if you reach for flavoured yogurts, it kills most of the benefits. Dr. Sethi stresses that most of these flavoured yogurts are marketed as healthy, “but often loaded with added sugars and artificial flavours.” Instead of flavoured varieties, pick the good old plain Greek yogurt and add berries, cinnamon, and chia seeds to make it more delicious and nutritious. Milk in coffee
Yes, that’s right. For some, adding milk to the coffee can do more harm than good. “Lactose can be irritating for sensitive guts and trigger bloating or discomfort,” Dr. Sethi says. Instead, stick to plain black coffee. If you like milk in your coffee, go for almond milk, and add some cinnamon powder for a sweet boost.
‘Kahin Bada, Kahin Chhota’: Ravi Kishan Uses Samosa Analogy To Demand Regulation Of Food Prices
Granola
Millions of people across the world have granola for breakfast. This breakfast staple is considered healthy, but guess what? It isn’t really. Most of the granola you buy is packed with added sugars, making it worse for your gut than some desserts, because excess sugar feeds the harmful bacteria, leading to inflammation. Dr. Sethi suggests opting for steel-cut oats or plain yogurt with berries and chia.
Google LLC said today it’s launching its artificial intelligence coding agent Jules in general availability, following a successful, months-long beta testing phase. An asynchronous agent, its purpose is to help users write, test and improve software code.
The company first revealed Jules in December 2024 as a Google Labs project, before launching it in beta in May, shortly after it was showcased at Google I/O 2025. Now, after three months of extensive testing from developers and AI enthusiasts, it’s finally being made available to paying customers.
While Jules is clearly aimed at developers, Google also thinks it can be helpful for anyone who’s dabbling in things like website design, app building or automation, and believes it can be especially powerful for enterprise workers, even if they lack formal coding skills.
Google said Jules is powered by Gemini 2.5 Pro, which is the company’s most advanced and sophisticated large language model, optimized for tasks that require reasoning and advanced planning. It has the ability to handle multiple tasks at once, in parallel, making it ideal for multistep workflows, the company said.
It has also been updated, with a more streamlined user interface and new features such as multimodal support, allowing it to display visual outputs from web applications. In addition, Jules can now reuse past setups, visualize test results and integrate GitHub Issues, creating a more seamless development loop.
According to Google, beta testers submitted hundreds of thousands of tasks to Jules, with more than 140,000 code improvements being shared publicly.
In an interview with TechCrunch, Google Labs Director of Product Kathy Korevec said Jules runs asynchronously in a virtual machine, setting it apart from other popular AI coding agents, such as Cursor, Lovable and Windsurf. In contrast, those coding agents all work synchronously, which means that users have to be more involved, watching the output they generate after each prompt.
“Jules operates like an extra set of hands. You can basically kick off tasks to it, and then you could close your computer and walk away from it if you want and then come back hours later,” Korevec explained. “Jules would have those tasks done for you, versus if you were doing that with a local agent or using a synchronous agent, you would be bound to that session.”
Google’s agentic AI push
Jules is not the only AI coding tool Google has built. The Gemini app possesses programming skills, and the company recently launched a new vibe-coding app called Opal. But unlike those apps, Google is actually planning to use Jules internally to help with its own projects.
Korevec said the company has already tested it on some internal coding tasks, and is now making a “big push” to use it in “a lot more projects.”
While Google’s staffers will presumably have unlimited access to Jules, everyone else will have to pay up if they want to go beyond the 15 individual daily tasks and three concurrent tasks allowed with the free version. To increase the number of tasks, users are required to pay for a Google AI Pro or Ultra subscription, which cost $124.99 and $199.99 per month, respectively.
The launch of Jules is part of a broader push by Google to integrate its Gemini-based AI agents with all of its products, beyond developer tools. With its task-oriented agents, Google is betting that AI can be far more productive than just responding in a chat window, automating various aspects of work.
AI agents can plan, take actions and learn over time, and they have the potential to enhance productivity in almost every aspect of business operations, and perhaps even assist in our personal lives, too.
Image: Google
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