Tennessee mom reunites girl found wandering in roadway with parents: โIt takes a villageโ
โIt takes a village. So I also extended my love to their baby and was able to be her guide. Because it takes a village,โ Walls said.
๐บ๐ธ ๋ฏธ๊ตญ ยท "WAND" ยท ์ด 18๊ฑด
ํํฐ ๋ณด๊ธฐํ์ฌ ์ง์
50.0
0 = ๋ถ์ ์ฐ์ธ
50 = ์ค๋ฆฝ
100 = ๊ธ์ ์ฐ์ธ
์ต๊ทผ 7์ผ ๊ธฐ์ค 10,302๊ฑด์ ๋ถ์ํ ๊ฒฐ๊ณผ, ๋ด์ค ์ฌ๋ฆฌ์ง์๋ 50.0(๊ท ํ)์ ๋๋ค. ๊ธ์ 0๊ฑด(0.0%)ยท์ค๋ฆฝ 10,302๊ฑด(100.0%)ยท๋ถ์ 0๊ฑด(0.0%)์ด๋ฉฐ, ์ค๋ฆฝ ๋น์ค์ด ๋๋ ทํ๊ฒ ๋์ต๋๋ค. ์ฑํฅ ์ง์๋ ์ข ํฉ 19.4(์ค๋ ๊ท ํ)์ ๋๋ค.
โIt takes a village. So I also extended my love to their baby and was able to be her guide. Because it takes a village,โ Walls said.
โThe Daily Showโ host Jordan Klepper went down South to celebrate Americaโs 250th birthday for a new installment of โJordan Klepper Fingers the Pulse.โ Airing during tonightโs episode of โThe Daily Show,โ the segment finds the host in New Orleans during Sail250, a traveling maritime celebration featuring ships and military vessels. Klepper wanders the streets [โฆ]
The convenience of contactless payments can already feel magical, but Cash App is really leaning into that with its latest accessory. The mobile payment service is launching the Cash App Wand: an NFC-enabled, iridescent, star-topped wand that allows users to make on-the-go payments without pulling out their phone or card. This plays on a popular [โฆ]
You can tap the star-shaped, NFC-enabled wand at terminals to make contactless payments. It's the first of several tap-to-pay hardware doodads coming from Cash App.
Cash App plans to launch more tap-to-pay tags
Marc Maron, Leanne Morgan and Julio Torres also swap stories of fear, โf***abilityโ and the surprising pressure on comedy special fashion choices.
This open-source community project lets you create a StumbleUpon-like experience for recommending your favorite sites.
Prediction markets have wandered into the middle of a fresh constitutional fight. Minnesota just passed the nationโs first outright ban, classing these markets as gambling and putting them under the stateโs usual authority to police public morals and protect consumers. Washington didnโt wait long to weigh in. The federal Commodity Futures Trading Commission promptly sued, [โฆ]
From Judge F. Dennis Saylor IV yesterday in U.S. v. Nshimiye (D. Mass.): This is a criminal case arising outโฆ The post Court Rejects Claim That Rwandan Speech Restrictions Will Prevent Rwandan Witnesses in U.S. Perjury Trial "from Speaking Freely About the Genocide" appeared first on Reason.com.
A panel of international arbitrators has rejected a multimillion-dollar claim by Rwanda against the United Kingdom linked to a refugee resettlement deal that Prime Minister Keir Starmer scrapped immediately after taking office in 2024.
At 35,000 feet, flight attendants have one urgent request for passengers: keep your hands โ and wandering fingers โ to yourself.
Written by Chris Cornwell (โA Discovery of Witchesโ) and Oliver Lansley (โWhereโs Wanda?โ), the โmodern reinvention of the crime proceduralโ casts the protagonist as a criminal psychology professor who leads a double life and becomes a police consultant.
Tampa Bay Rays star shortstop Wander Franco was found criminally responsible for the abuse of a minor in the Dominican Republic, but will not face jail time after the Dominican judge ruled that he was both a victim and a defendant in the case. The post Raysโ Wander Franco Found Criminally Responsible on Minor Sex Abuse Charge, Avoids Jail Time appeared first on Breitbart.
Former All-Star Wander Franco avoids prison after a Dominican Republic court grants a judicial pardon despite his guilty verdict for abusing a minor.
A Dominican judge has ruled that Tampa Bay Rays shortstop Wander Franco is criminally responsible for the sexual and psychological abuse of a minor but will not serve a sentence.
The ruling, which came down from a three-person judicial panel, concluded that Franco was both defendant and victim in the case, and it led them to grant him a judicial pardon despite finding him guilty.
Hiking is one of life's great joys. Turning off the screens and stepping out into nature for an extended period of time, perhaps even several days, is rejuvenating. Unfortunately, as someone with two young kids and a bad back, I'm not really able to go backpacking anymore. So I often find myself trying to live [โฆ]
I first met Robert Woo in 2011, during his third time walking in a powered exoskeleton. The architect had been paralyzed in a construction accident four years earlier, but he was determined to get back on his feet. Watching him clunk across a rehab room in an exoskeleton prototype, the technology felt astonishing. I had the same reaction when reporting on early brain-computer interfaces (BCIs), which enabled paralyzed people to move robotic arms or communicate by thought alone. Both types of bionic technology seemed to verge on magic. But that initial sense of awe, Iโve learned over many years of reporting on these technologies, is only a starting point. What matters is not what these systems can do in a carefully staged demo but how they perform in the real world. Do they work reliably? Can people with disabilities use them for their intended purposes? And what does it actually costโin time, effort, and trade-offsโto do so? The question isnโt whether the technology looks impressive the first time but whether it holds up on the hundredth. The special report in this issue, โCyborg Tech From the Insideโ takes that perspective seriously. In my feature article on Woo, an exoskeleton super-user who has spent 15 years testing these systems, the story of the technology is inseparable from the story of its use. Wooโs relentless feedback has driven steady, incremental improvements. In Edd Gentโs reporting on the pioneers testing the earliest BCIs, the experience of these extraordinary technologies likewise resolves into something more complex. As one trial participant notes, these early adopters are like the first astronauts, who barely reached space before coming back down to Earth. Together, these stories reframe these individuals not as passive medical patients but as the ultimate beta testers and co-engineers of the bionic age. I saw the gap between demonstration and daily use firsthand when I interviewed Woo in a Manhattan showroom recently, where he was testing a new self-balancing exoskeleton from Wandercraft. The device is a striking advance that kept him upright without crutches, but it also revealed the friction of the real world. As Woo tried to walk out the door, barely an inch of slope on the Park Avenue sidewalk was enough to trigger the machineโs safety sensors and halt his progress. It was a stark reminder of how far these systems must evolve before they fit seamlessly into everyday life. For the people who use them, that seamless integration is the ultimate goal. Getting there will depend not just on technical breakthroughs but on how well these systems hold up outside controlled environments, over time, and under real conditions. Looking from the inside doesnโt make these technologies any less remarkable, but it does change how we judge themโnot by what they can do once for a photo but by what they can sustain over a lifetime. Thatโs the standard their users have been applying all along. Our commitment to evaluating technology from the userโs perspective extends beyond this special report. To provide a necessary corrective to the โtechno-solutionismโ that often dominates coverage of assistive devices, IEEE Spectrum created the Taenzer Fellowship for Disability-Engaged Journalism, under which six writers with disabilities are contributing articles about the devices they rely on daily. As Special Projects Director Stephen Cass notes, these journalists โarenโt afraid to ask clear-eyed questions about the tech and are deeply aware of how it impacts humans.โ You can read the fellowsโ work at spectrum.ieee.org/tag/taenzer-fellowship.