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May 30 2026SPORTS

Daria Kasatkina: From Russian Roots to Australian Courts

She was born on May 7, 1997 in Tolyatti, a city known for its factories. Her family loved sports; her dad played ice hockey and her mom ran track. Tennis entered her life when she was six, after watching her older brother play. The game grew from a hobby into a passion that shaped her future. Growi

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May 30 2026TECHNOLOGY

AI Changes How Companies Keep Running

Companies are learning that old ways of planning for problems aren’t enough when AI runs most decisions. The idea is to move from “backup” plans that wait for a failure to create parallel, independent systems that keep working no matter what. Because AI workloads spread across many clouds and

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May 30 2026POLITICS

Strong Allies Needed to Keep China in Check

The U. S. defence chief said that Asia must spend more on its own armies to stop China from becoming too powerful in the region. He spoke at a big meeting of military leaders in Singapore, where he urged countries like Japan, South Korea and the Philippines to raise their defence budgets to about 3

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May 30 2026FINANCE

Capital Markets Get a New European Twist

Germany’s finance ministry announced that the six largest EU economies have reached a common view on a European Commission plan to bring capital market oversight under a single authority. The proposal, introduced in December, would shift control from national regulators to the European Securities

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May 30 2026CRYPTO

Kalshi Opens U. S. Door to Crypto Perpetual Futures

Kalshi, a platform known for its prediction markets, has announced plans to offer perpetual futures contracts that focus on cryptocurrencies. This move gives American traders a regulated alternative to the many offshore exchanges that currently dominate this space. Perpetual futures, or “perps, ” d

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May 30 2026LIFESTYLE

All‑In‑One Pet Vacuum That Really Works

The new vacuum from Bissell promises to make life easier for people with pets. It has two brush rolls inside one machine, so it can pick up big crumbs and tiny hair at the same time. This means you don’t have to switch tools or go over a spot twice. The machine also has a special filter that trap

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May 30 2026HEALTH

What works best for healing thoracolumbar burst fractures: surgery or rest?

When someone breaks their back in a bad fall or car crash, doctors have two main ways to help: either perform surgery to fix the bones or let the body heal itself with bracing and rest. A recent study looked at people with specific types of spine injuries called A3 and A4 thoracolumbar burst fractur

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May 30 2026TECHNOLOGY

Better Cooling Tech May Change How Phones Handle Heat

Phones get hot when they work hard, especially during gaming or heavy tasks. Most chips today use a design where memory sits right on top of the processor, which traps heat and forces the chip to slow down sooner. Samsung tried a different approach with its Exynos 2600 by putting a copper heatsink d

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May 30 2026TECHNOLOGY

A New Push for Homegrown Medical Isotopes

A nuclear tech firm from Albuquerque is taking steps to build a production site near Eunice, New Mexico. Its goal is to create isotopes that hospitals rely on for scans and treatments. Right now, the U. S. gets all its Molybdenum-99 from old reactors overseas. That supply isn’t stable—if something g

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May 30 2026LIFESTYLE

Why Going Out Beats Just Watching

People now crave real-life moments more than ever. After years of endless streaming and delayed viewing, simple watching feels empty. Fans don’t just want to see events—they want to feel them, smell them, and be part of them as they happen. Stadiums fill up faster than ever, not just because of bett

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