Hate losing a daily streak? This iPhone app is perfect for your habit-tracking Look, I don’t know what it is about habit-tracking apps, but I can find one that seems perfect, use it religiously for a couple of weeks, and then my interest in it fades, and I stop adding to it. My ... 05/8/2024 - 1:26 am | View Link
Competitive Advantage Or Data Privacy Problem? Marketing Mix Modeling And Tech Giants Google and Meta are stepping up to fulfill the demand for marketing mix modeling platforms, but that presents a conundrum for marketers. 05/8/2024 - 12:00 am | View Link
How to Get Cheap Last-Minute Flights, According to the Experts Another good rule of thumb for cheap last-minute flights: There is no secret time to score the perfect deal. While some research says flights are cheaper on certain days of the week (a 2024 report by ... 05/6/2024 - 11:01 am | View Link
Opinion: Steps Aircraft Owners Can Take To Avoid Tracking Jet tracking can bring unwanted media attention, as it has also become a climate accountability tool, and individuals or organizations may receive backlash for their carbon footprint. To avoid the ... 05/3/2024 - 4:53 am | View Link
Hapag-Lloyd launches real-time container tracking tool Hapag-Lloyd has launched real-time container tracking on most of its nearly 3 million strong fleet. Digital tool Live Position is a fleet-wide dry container tracking product with which Hapag-Lloyd ... 04/30/2024 - 11:33 pm | View Link
This story was originally published by Inside Climate News and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.
Although the nation has seen record federal investment in infrastructure under President Joe Biden, the majority of the funds are flowing to roads and bridges—not to projects that will clean up the transportation system, those tracking the spending have found.
In an effort to revive the original transformative vision that climate action advocates, including Biden, brought to Washington at the start of his administration, Congressional Democrats on Monday were set to introduce the Build Green Act, legislation that would invest $500 billion over the next 10 years in addressing the nation’s largest source of greenhouse gas pollution: transportation.
The transportation sector now makes up 28 percent of US carbon emissions, and there has been little progress in reducing that burden.
“Is it antisemitism or anti-Semitism?” a Mother Jones reporter asked me last week, a question freshly in focus as campus protests grow. It’s been six months since the FBI announced that antisemitism (by any style) is at historic levels, and three years since the Associated Press, the New York Times, and several other news organizations changed “anti-Semitism” to “antisemitism,” or expressed support for the switch.
After more than 50 years as a Schedule I substance, marijuana is slated to get reclassified. In a historic shift, the Drug Enforcement Administration reportedly plans to modify the drug’s designation under the Controlled Substances Act from a category that includes drugs like heroin and meth to the less dangerous but still illegal Schedule III, alongside ketamine and anabolic steroids.
Schedule I drugs, as my colleague Julia Métraux reported last week, by definition have a “high potential” for abuse without any “currently accepted medical use.” With the change to Schedule III, explains Harvard neuroscientist Staci Gruber, who studies the effect of marijuana on our brains, “We’re no longer saying ‘no accepted medical value.’ That’s a big difference.
COVID-19 variants called 'FLiRT' continue to spread across the US, CDC says KSAT San AntonioNew COVID variant 'FLiRT': What to know about spread, symptoms USA TODAYNew COVID variants appearing across the US as cases trend downward WWLP.comFLiRT, New Covid-19 Variant In US: What We Know So Far NDTV