The Best Pool Accessories to Upgrade Your Summer (2026)
These are the cleaning robots, water monitors, and toys actually worth buying for pool season.
IT/기술 · "GRADE" · 총 50건
필터 보기현재 지수
50.3
0 = 부정 우세
50 = 중립
100 = 긍정 우세
최근 7일 기준 82,033건을 분석한 결과, 뉴스 심리지수는 50.3(균형)입니다. 긍정 4,163건(5.1%)·중립 75,839건(92.4%)·부정 2,031건(2.5%)이며, 중립 비중이 뚜렷하게 높습니다. 성향 지수는 종합 14.8(중도 균형)입니다.
These are the cleaning robots, water monitors, and toys actually worth buying for pool season.
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The Americans were closing in, the situation was getting more dangerous by the minute — and President Xi Jinping was waiting for my recommendation. The standoff began in May, when the US announced a package of anti-aircraft and anti-ship missiles to Taiwan that would significantly upgrade the island’s ability to repel a Chinese invasion. We […]
Amazon has announced a new version of its fully autonomous warehouse robot, Proteus, that will can interact using language instead of code. The expanded capabilities come as part of a growing pivot toward automation as the e-commerce giant replaces its human workers with robots. Amazon says the AI-powered upgrade means its human employees can assign […]
Shokz has announced two new versions of its open earbuds. Like the original OpenDots One that launched in May 2025, the new Shokz OpenDots 2 and OpenDots Air are both designed to be worn clipped to the back of your ear with their drivers positioned to project sound toward your ear canals without blocking them. […]
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This sponsored article is brought to you by Black & Veatch. The biggest challenge facing utilities today isn’t what it seems. It’s not demand, even as load growth accelerates. It’s not extreme weather, even as “major events” become routine. It’s not cybersecurity, even as connections expand across the grid. The real challenge is this: Distribution systems were designed for a different reality. Long gone are the days of predictable demand, one-way power flow and isolated disruptions. At Black & Veatch, we see that leading utilities are no longer debating whether to modernize. They’re deciding how quickly they can do it, and how to do it at scale. Across grid modernization programs globally, three truths consistently emerge. They define what it takes to prepare the distribution system for what’s next: 1. Outage response is not a resilience strategy Resilience is being redefined in real time. A strategy centered on mobilizing crews and restoring service as quickly as possible is reactive, and increasingly insufficient. Resilience has to shift upstream into integrated system design. That starts with hardening. Stronger poles, undergrounding and structural upgrades all have a role, particularly in high-risk corridors. We’re also seeing meaningful gains from how the network is configured and how quickly it can respond without waiting on manual intervention. This is where distribution automation programs can change outcomes. Strategically placed reclosers, automated switches and fault indicators help contain disruptions before they spread. When combined with feeder reconfiguration and updated protection strategies, distribution automation investments allow utilities to set more aggressive recovery targets and achieve measurable reductions in outage duration and customer impact. 2. Future-readiness depends on DERs at scale Forecasting is less and less reliable. Only 19 percent of utilities report strong confidence in their ability to predict future load growth, according to the Black & Veatch 2025 Electric Report. Distributed Energy Resources (DERs) like solar, storage, EVs and behind-the-meter generation are exciting solutions; but they fundamentally change how the system operates. Power is no longer just delivered. It’s injected, stored and redirected in ways the system was never designed to manage. At scale, these challenges show up quickly — particularly on feeders where distributed generation is approaching or exceeding hosting capacity. Protection coordination becomes more difficult when fault current comes from multiple directions. Voltage becomes less predictable as generation fluctuates throughout the day. And planning models must now account for highly variable, location-specific behavior. Distribution modernization is fundamentally changing how the system is designed and operated so it can absorb disruption, manage bi-directional flows and respond in real time. Adapting to bi-directional power flow requires more than incremental updates. Leading utilities are responding by building flexibility into the system, moving beyond static assumptions toward dynamic hosting capacity and interconnection studies, planning that incorporates DER, EV adoption and localized load growth, and infrastructure aligned with the communications and control needed to manage it. 3. The edge must be intelligent, visible and secure As system stress and complexity increase, utilities need far greater visibility and control over the network. Historically, utilities relied on customer calls, Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) at the substation level and field crews to understand what was happening on the system. That model doesn’t hold up. You can’t effectively manage a system you can’t see. Plus, the most critical events are increasingly happening beyond the substation — on feeders, laterals, and at the edge where DER and customer behavior are interacting with the grid. Grid-edge technologies have become essential. Sensors, Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI) and automated switching provide the raw data and control needed to move from reactive to proactive operations. In more advanced deployments, utilities are creating centralized control environments that allow operators to see and manage the distribution system in near real time. That capability is enabled by: Advanced communications networks to form the backbone of real-time grid visibility Distribution Management System (DMS) and Outage Management System (OMS) to enable faster, more coordinated system response Analytics, AI and machine learning to improve situational awareness, anticipate system conditions, and support operational decision-making The same connectivity enabling this real-time visibility and control also introduces new vulnerabilities, blurring the line between physical and cyber risk, yet many utilities manage them separately. Only 22 percent have unified teams in place, even as threats continue to rise, including a 50 percent increase in substation attacks and growing exposure to malware and ransomware, according to the Black & Veatch 2025 Electric Report. Cybersecurity and resilient network design must be embedded into the architecture from the outset—not layered on after the fact. See what bolder vision looks like Distribution modernization is fundamentally changing how the system is designed and operated so it can absorb disruption, manage bi-directional flows and respond in real time. To learn about a successful program, check out Georgia Power’s recent grid modernization program. Black & Veatch partnered with the utility on large-scale infrastructure upgrades. The results? Outages are down 76 percent, restoration times have improved by more than 80 percent and communities across Georgia are powered by a grid built to meet the future head-on. When the state faced the most destructive storm in the company’s history, Hurricane Helene, Georgia Power deployed a rapid response team that utilized its “smart grid” and restored power to more than 1 million customers within days. A grid built to meet the future head-on—that’s the result of bolder vision.
Deutsche Bank analyst downgraded SoftBank to hold.
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Alienware is taking to this year's Computex 2026 in Taipei to announce some cool gaming monitors, most notably two exciting OLED options that are coming at different points this year. First off, the company is debuting the successor to its very first QD-OLED gaming monitor from 2022 with a refreshed design and high-end specs that's […]
Campanha de vacinação contra a gripe termina neste sábado sem bater meta pelo quinto ano consecutivo Reprodução Terminou hoje a Campanha Nacional de Vacinação contra a gripe e o país não conseguiu atingir a meta de cobertura do grupo prioritário pelo sexto ano seguido. 📱Favorite o g1 no Google e acompanhe as principais notícias do dia No último dia da campanha nacional, Belo Horizonte abriu dezenove postos de saúde. O público-alvo é formado por crianças com menos de seis anos, idosos e gestantes. Tatiani Fereguetti, diretora de Promoção à Saúde e Vigilância Epidemiológica de BH, reforça que "é importante que a população esteja imunizada o quanto antes. A nossa cobertura vacinal atualmente . Essa situação se repete pelo Brasil. Até agora, a cobertura vacinal do grupo prioritário chegou a 38% e, desde 2022, o país não atinge a meta ao fim da campanha. A baixa adesão à vacina acontece no momento em que vem aumentando os casos de Síndrome Respiratória Aguda Grave no país. O último relatório da Fiocruz apontou alta no número de infecções em pessoas de todas as idades. Segundo o boletim InfoGripe, todos os estados, menos Rondônia, estão em nível de alerta, risco ou alto risco . "Síndrome Respiratória Aguda Grave leva os pacientes à internação e, principalmente, os grupos mais vulneráveis. Essas pessoas têm o risco de adoecer, necessitar de tratamento, em unidades de terapia intensiva e, com muita frequência, evoluem para óbito", diz o infectologista Carlos Starling. Mesmo com o fim da campanha, o Ministério da Saúde diz que vai manter a vacina disponível nos postos. E a esperança é ver o Zé Gotinha agradecendo cada vez mais pela atitude de quem se previne. A aposentada Silvane Mansur é uma das que não deixa de se vacinar: "Ela faz um efeito bom pra mim então eu recomendo e tento tomar sempre que eu posso". A pequena Antonela Costa Inacio, de 4 anos, também entende a importância do gesto: "Porque é bem pra saúde. Protege né? E ainda ganhou um pirulito". GloboPop: clique para ver os vídeos do palco do Jornal Nacional
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As handheld consoles continue to grow and push the limits of what you can actually hold in your hands, the Arduboy FX-C comes in a refreshingly pocketable package. It manages to squeeze the best features of past models and some welcome upgrades into a handheld that’s still no larger or thicker than a few credit […]
FOR the last three years since ChatGPT was introduced, prominent writers, editors and litterateurs have been openly hostile to the idea of AI being able to write fiction, poetry or prose — indeed, any kind of literature. The tech companies that introduced all these LLMs, imagining ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Grok, and Copilot as writing aids, study buddies, collaborators and co-authors, have thrown a nuclear bomb into the literary world, and most of its inhabitants are still in a crouch position, bracing for an impact that detonated back in 2022. But the literary world must call a truce because AI is here to stay. Moreover, any writer who teaches writing, any literary editor or agent who evaluates submissions, any practitioner called upon to judge a literary competition must become AI literate; it’s an unavoidable skill that’s simply part of the job from now on. Last week, the Commonwealth Writing Prize and Granta published five regional short story winners, one of which, Jamir Nazar’s ‘A Serpent in the Grove’, was singled out as possibly AI-generated. It raised a furore on social media but it didn’t surprise me at all. I’ve graded hundreds of student essays, judged creative writing capstones and a major Pakistani literary prize in the last year. So much is now written with the help of AI that I feel overwhelmed. I’ve been using the last two years to learn exactly how AI writes — not just its processes, but its style and its voice. I’ve studied it as much as I would study any human author, looking for how it handles dialogue, description, character and plot. Yet if I’d stuck my head in the sand and refused to touch AI for the sake of artistic integrity, I would be letting down all those people who trust my judgement and expertise. Students are addicted to AI not because they want to cheat, but because they’re terrified of looking stupid or inadequate. I spent hours tinkering with AI, asking it to write things in a Pakistani context: a synopsis for a Harry Potter book set in Lahore; descriptions of Karachi. AI churned out showy, contrived prose that looks like it’s doing a lot without actually saying anything meaningful. It blathered inanities about Karachi being a “city that remembers” and Pakistani women who “sauntered through the bazaar as if their bodies bore the weight of generations of family secrets”. AI wrote verbal pyrotechnics with no emotional connection to the city that I love. It’s too much of a temptation to expect people, especially students, not to use AI to write. Pakistan is a former British colony with a postcolonial hangover about the English language, even though few of us speak it fluently and even fewer can write it well. Yet the language of instruction in top Pakistani schools and universities has remained and always will be English. Students are addicted to AI not because they want to cheat, but because they’re terrified of looking stupid or inadequate. And the LLMs are ever-present to capitalise on that fear. I have to keep telling my students: AI is here not to help you, but to make money off you. Also, there will never be a foolproof AI-detection tool. AI will keep learning more from every person that asks it to help them write a story; AI ‘detectors’ will offer you an answer based on their own algorithms and biases. Differentiating AI writing from human writing requires human discernment, the same faculty we use to know when writing is sublime or terrible. It requires instinct, experience and a close look at the person’s work overall to see if the story is a representation of their usual style — call it the new due diligence in a post-AI world. The culprit in the Commonwealth Writers debacle was not racism or some kind of Western pandering to the postcolonial writer, but sheer ignorance on the part of judges. And underneath that ignorance lies a wilful denial about just how seismic the AI shift is. Everyone who must evaluate writing professionally is scared of the threat that AI poses to the literary arts and the earnings of the publishing industry. They’re terrified of the idea that everyone else is already so far ahead they may never be able to catch up. AI has already learned to mimic cultural inflections. It will talk about any part of the world — Guyana, South Korea, Bosnia — with pompous certainty and try to dazzle you with metaphorically bizarre surface-level descriptors or overwhelm you with atmosphere so you don’t realise there’s actually no plot or insight, no empathy, none of the beauty that makes writing an art as well as a practice. Personally, I resent the tech bros who have turned my relationship with writing from practitioner to policewoman, turning a jaundiced eye to everyone’s writing and suspecting the worst. AI is now influencing young people learning how to write to the extent that even my best students have started to sound like AI. I know that AI recognises patterns and produces only a facsimile of good writing, much like the proverbial broken clock that’s right twice a day. The practice of writing words to connect with a reader, communicate ideas and tell a story is a human endeavour that AI will never be able to match. Fear won’t stop me from looking it straight in the AI and declaring, “You have no power over me.” I urge everyone else — writers, teachers, judges and editors — to do the same. The writer currently teaches Expository Writing at AKUFAS. Published in Dawn, May 30th, 2026
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Shares of Netweb Technologies surged over 15% on Friday to hit their fresh 52-week high of Rs 4,680 on the NSE amid high volumes. The stock extended its gaining streak for the third session in a row, rising 21% in this period.The rally comes on the back of a ratings upgrade by CRISIL Ratings Limited. The company's Long-term rating has been upgraded to 'Crisil A+ / Stable'; while short-term rating reaffirmed to Crisil A1. Netweb offers computing solutions with fully integrated design and manufacturing capabilities. Its HCS offering comprises HPC, Private cloud and (HCI), AI systems and enterprise workstations, High performance storage (HPS) and Data Centre ServersCrisil Ratings believes NTIL will continue to benefit from the extensive experience of its promoters and established relationships with clients.The rating agency has also listed a slew of factors that will likely aid its growth. Among them are sustained revenue growth to over Rs 4,000 crore, with diversification across the end users earning steady operating margin at 13-14%, leading to higher-than-expected net cash accruals. Efficient working capital management leading to moderate dependence on debt and sustenance of healthy financial risk profile and liquidity will be another trigger according to CRISIL.It has also highlighted caveats that include the likelihood of decline in revenue below Rs 2,000 crores or fall in operating margin to below 11%, could lead to lower-than-expected net cash accrual. Meanwhile large, debt-funded capex or substantial increase in the working capital requirement, thus weakening the financial risk profile and liquidity.CRISIL shares have been market laggards, falling over 8% in 2026 while extending its decline to 24% over the past 12 months.Netweb Technologies reported Q4FY26 revenue from operations at Rs 774 crore, growing 87% year-on-year. Its operating EBITDA for Q4FY26 stood at Rs 97 crore while the adjusted operating EBITDA for Q4FY26 was Rs 102 crore, up 72% YoY, with a margin of 13.2%.(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of Economic Times)
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Com foco na inovação da educação médica, a Universidade de Taubaté (UNITAU) realizou, na última semana, a segunda edição do Congresso Médico UNITAU (CMU), no campus Caraguá, no Litoral Norte. O evento reuniu mais de 1,1 mil pessoas entre estudantes, professores e profissionais da saúde em uma programação voltada à troca de conhecimentos, inovação e atualização científica na Medicina. Ao longo dos quatro dias de evento, os participantes acompanharam palestras, debates e atividades conduzidas por especialistas convidados, com temas atuais e relevantes para a formação médica. Além da programação científica, o congresso também teve caráter solidário, arrecadando mais de mil itens entre alimentos, produtos de limpeza e higiene pessoal, que serão destinados a ações sociais. UNITAU Divulgação Entre os convidados esteve o médico urologista Eduardo Mazzucato, que ministrou uma palestra sobre inovação e robótica na Medicina. Para ele, iniciativas como o CMU contribuem diretamente para a formação acadêmica dos futuros profissionais da saúde. “Esse tipo de evento cria um ecossistema vibrante onde estudantes, professores e toda a equipe multidisciplinar se inspiram mutuamente. A tecnologia já é uma linguagem nativa para essa geração e ver como os estudantes absorvem conceitos complexos, como cirurgia robótica e inovações tecnológicas, traz muita esperança para o futuro da Medicina”, destaca. O especialista também ressaltou a importância de aliar tecnologia e cuidado humano na prática médica. “Não estamos falando de um futuro distante, mas do presente da profissão. É emocionante ver a sede desses jovens em unir inovação tecnológica à empatia do olhar clínico, transformando de forma extraordinária a vida dos pacientes”, completa. UNITAU Divulgação Outro palestrante do congresso, o médico Deusdedit Cortez, destacou o envolvimento dos estudantes na organização das atividades e a relevância da experiência para a formação acadêmica. “Foi um prazer participar do Congresso Médico Universitário da UNITAU. Percebemos o interesse dos acadêmicos em aprender com seus professores e com os especialistas convidados. Além de oferecer um curso de excelência, a universidade proporciona momentos fundamentais para a formação médica”, afirma. O 2º CMU buscou aprimorar a formação médica conectada às transformações da área da saúde, incentivando o desenvolvimento científico, humano e social dos estudantes. Protagonismo estudantil Assim como na primeira edição, o 2º Congresso Médico UNITAU (CMU) contou com forte protagonismo estudantil. Entre os alunos que se destacaram na organização do evento está o universitário do 7º semestre de Medicina, Nelson Migani. “Ao longo dos congressos, tivemos a oportunidade de conhecer muitas pessoas e profissionais diferentes, trocar experiências e aprender com cada contato. Além disso, organizar essas duas primeiras edições do CMU foi uma vivência extremamente enriquecedora, tanto no aspecto acadêmico quanto pessoal”, enfatiza. Segundo a Reitoria da UNITAU, o sucesso da segunda edição do congresso evidencia o comprometimento dos estudantes com a formação médica e com a organização do evento. A instituição destaca que o Congresso Médico UNITAU busca promover inovação e discutir tendências da Medicina contemporânea, além de aproximar os universitários de profissionais de referência na área. Outro ponto ressaltado é o protagonismo estudantil em todas as etapas da organização, proporcionando uma experiência que amplia a formação humanista e profissional dos alunos para além da sala de aula. Vestibular de Inverno 2026 Estão abertas, até o dia 7 de junho, as inscrições para o curso de Medicina da UNITAU. A grade curricular oferece atividades práticas desde os primeiros semestres da graduação. Há vagas disponíveis para os campi de Caraguá, Cruzeiro e Taubaté. Saiba mais em unitau.br/medicina. ACOM/UNITAU