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If 54% levies on Chinaâwhere most iPhones are madeâpersist, Apple could pass on the extra expense to customers.
Your favorite iPhone could soon become much pricier, thanks to tariffs.
Forecasters warned of a violent storm system that could bring catastrophic weather to the central and south U.S. through Saturday.
Parts of the Midwest and South faced the possibility of torrential rains and life-threatening flash floods Friday, while many communities were still reeling from tornadoes that destroyed whole neighborhoods and killed at least seven people.
Forecasters warned of catastrophic weather on the way, with round after round of heavy rains expected in the central U.S. through Saturday. Satellite imagery showed thunderstorms lined up like freight trains to take the same tracks over communities in Arkansas, Tennessee, and Kentucky, according to the national Weather Prediction Center in Maryland.
The bull’s-eye centered on a swath along the Mississippi River and included the more than 1.3 million people around Memphis.
More than 90 million people were at risk of severe weather from Texas to Minnesota to Maine, according to the Oklahoma-based Storm Prediction Center.
Those killed in the initial wave of storms that spawned powerful tornadoes on Wednesday and early Thursday were in Tennessee, Missouri, and Indiana. They included a Tennessee man and his teen daughter whose home was destroyed, and a man whose pickup struck downed power lines in Indiana. In Missouri, Garry Moore, who was chief of the Whitewater Fire Protection District, died while likely trying to help a stranded motorist, according to Highway Patrol spokesperson Sgt. Clark Parrott.
Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee said entire neighborhoods in the hard-hit town of Selmer were “completely wiped out” and said it was too early to know whether there were more deaths as searches continued. He warned people across the state to stay vigilant with more severe weather predicted.
“Don’t let your guard down,” he said during a Thursday evening news conference. “Don’t stop watching the weather. Don’t stop preparing yourself. Have a plan.”
With flattened homes behind him, Dakota Woods described seeing the twister come through Selmer.
“I was walking down the street,” Woods said Thursday. “Next thing you know, I look up, the sky is getting black and blacker, and it’s lighting up green lights, and it’s making a formation of a twister or tornado.”
Most American companies saw red after Trumpâs announcementâGoodyear saw green.
Yesterday, U.S. stock markets, and stock markets around the world, dramatically fell during the first trading session after President Donald Trump announced on Wednesday tariffs on nearly every country in the world. As noted by PBS, the S&P 500 plummeted 4.8%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average sank 4%, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq plunged 6%.
China also announced controls on exports of rare-earth metals, key ingredients in electronics and military applications.
China announced additional tariffs of 34% on U.S. goods on Friday, the most serious escalation in a trade war with President Donald Trump that has fed fears of a recession and triggered a global stock market rout.
Fast Companyâs Max Ufberg and Jared Newman cut through the hype to spotlight the AI tools that deliver real valueâand how to use them wisely.
AI tools are everywhere, changing the way we work, communicate, and even create. But which tools are actually useful? And how can users integrate them in a way thatâs both practical and ethical?
Host, writer, and speaker Baratunde Thurston on how AI can challenge us to ask better questions of humanity and how to think about the moral purpose of technology.
âWe don’t just follow orders or system prompts,â says Baratunde Thurston, host of Life with Machinesâa YouTube podcast exploring the human side of AI. âWe can change our own programming,â he continued. âWe can choose a higher goal.â
The new phenomenon known as vibecoding lets you describe an app and have AI build it to your specifications. The results astounded me.
For years, Iâve had a secret ambition tucked away somewhere near the back of my brain. It was to write a simple note-taking appâone that wouldnât be overwhelmed with features and that would reflect my own mental filing system. In part, this yen stemmed from my dissatisfaction with existing notetakers. But I also saw the project as an adventure in software development that could only make me a smarter technology user.
President Trump talks about âgroceriesâ as if itâs a foreign concept. That should have been a giant red flag.
Among other things, Donald Trump is a logophile. He loves words. For instance, he adores the word âtariffsâ so much, heâs called it a “beautiful word,â his âfavorite word,â and âmusic to [his] ears.â Itâs his âcellar door,â apparently. On Wednesday, while announcing the broad, seemingly indiscriminate application of that wonderful word during a much-hyped speech in the White House Rose Garden, Trump lingered on another word he loves: âgroceries.â
A shaky factory floor abruptly shut down Ring Popâs plant at a pivotal time. Now itâs set to make a sweet comeback.
When the Ring Pop factory in Scranton, Pennsylvania, unexpectedly shut down last summer because of a shaky floor, it abruptly halted production of tens of millions of the iconic oversized candy bauble lollipops that come attached to a cheap plastic ring meant to be worn on a finger.
Bran Ferrenâs company Applied Minds is one of the most unusual (and innovative) defense contractors youâve probably never heard of.
The way Bran Ferren sees it, the future of warfare depends as much on creativity as it does on raw firepower.
Expert Lisa Greene-Lewis shares the most important tax breaks parents should know about before filing.
With tax season fast approaching, itâs the perfect time for parents to take advantage of valuable tax deductions and credits that can reduce their tax bill or increase their refund.
These mistakes can make the job hunt drag onâespecially in such a challenging job market.
If you have been on the job market recently, you know how challenging it can be. Lots of tech companies, for example, are pulling back on hiring. Federal workers are being laid off by the thousands. And some types of jobs are simply not as available as they once were. Particularly in short supply are those prized white-collar positions paying $94,000 or more.
Corcoranâone of the longest-running sharks on âShark Tankâ with an estimated net worth of approximately $100 millionâknows how to build wealth.
Barbara Corcoran is one of Shark Tankâs longest-running sharks, with an estimated net worth of approximately $100 million. But sheâs also one of 10 kids from a working-class family. By age 23, sheâd held more than 20 jobs. By 52, she sold her real estate company for $66 million.Â
In 2022, 64% of Helsinkiâs energy for heating still came from coal. Now, after closing its last coal plant, thatâs dropped to zero.
A few years ago, if you turned on the heat in an apartment in Helsinki, the energy typically came from coal. But the cityâs power company shut down one coal plant in 2023, and the remaining one closed this weekâfour years earlier than a target set by the national government.
Burlap & Barrel built a business on foreign spices. Trumpâs tariffs are about to hit its bottom line.
When President Donald Trump announced his sweeping tariffs against America’s trading partners around the world, Ethan Frisch and Ori Zohar were paying close attention.
Generative technology offers speed and scale, but media accuracy may end up being a casualty as AI hallucinations remain a persistent problem.
The nonstop cavalcade of announcements in the AI world has created a kind of reality distortion field. There is so much buzz, and even more money, circulating in the industry that it feels almost sacrilegious to doubt that AI will make good on its promises to change the world. Deep research can do 1% of all knowledge work! Soon the internet will be designed for agents! Infinite Ghibli!
Respect, dignity, and trust, as well as hate, indifference, and disdain all play out in small moments of communication, which over time make up our worldview.
Andy Merolla is a professor in the Department of Communication at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Jeffrey Hall is a professor in the Department of Communication Studies and the director of the Relationships and Technology Lab at the University of Kanas.
Unlike regular power failures, which on average last about two hours while equipment is repaired, a PSPS lasts until weather conditions improve, which could be days.
Are you prepared for when the power goes out? To prevent massive wildfires in drought-prone, high-wind areas, electrical companies have begun preemptively shutting off electricity. These planned shutdowns are called public safety power shutoffs, abbreviated to PSPS, and theyâre increasingly common. So far this year, weâve seen them in Texas, New Mexico, and California.
An ill-timed April Foolsâ Day joke from a tool review website had customers up in arms, as stock markets crash and the economy looks increasingly dire.
Chalk it up to bad timing: Some Home Depot customers are furious after a recent April Fools’ Day prank from a tool review website suggested that the home improvement giant would start charging parking fees due to inflation.
What the president is actually imposing with tariffs is based on far more complicated math.
President Donald Trump promised tariffs that would raise U.S. import taxes high enough to mirror what others assess as trade penalties on American goods.