Arizona Public Service (APS) has signed agreements to add nearly 7,300 MW of renewable power, battery energy storage and natural gas to its energy mix to meet the state's growing demand for energy.
TROY, Mich.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Small business owners are less optimistic than they were a year ago and, as they accept a wider variety of payment methods such as debit and credit cards, digital wallets ...
Adult adoptees in Virginia can now obtain copies of their original birth certificates under a new state law that took effect Wednesday. Free-admission Salem Fair returns, expected to draw hundreds of ...
One UI 9 beta integrates Lockdown mode directly into the power menu, instantly locking the phone and disabling biometrics upon triggering. Samsung removed the explicit “Lockdown mode” option from One ...
OpenAI is now letting you give your presentations the AI treatment. The company announced that ChatGPT is available in Microsoft PowerPoint. The chatbot can create new presentation slides, as well as ...
Hamza Haq serves as a writer for the gaming guides and lists department at GameRant, while dabbling in news coverage on the side. Based in Pakistan, he has been writing professionally about games ...
A high-speed aircraft project gets even more power as modifications and testing push performance further. What challenges come with upgrading a plane built for speed? Princess of Wales arrives for ...
Nobody said building a fusion power plant would be easy. Physicists and engineers have been working for decades to crack the problem. But over the last year or so, fusion startup Zap Energy took a ...
I wore the world's first HDR10 smart glasses TCL's new E Ink tablet beats the Remarkable and Kindle Anker's new charger is one of the most unique I've ever seen Best laptop cooling pads Best flip ...
Veteran Democratic strategist James Carville suggested on Thursday that Democrats should quietly prepare to launch a variety of structural changes to ensure a political advantage once they regain ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Daphne Rubin-Vega stars as a laid-off office worker who spins into a murderous rage in this update of Elmer L. Rice’s 1923 classic. By Laura ...
Left to right: Catarina Gonzales, Courtney Hjaltman, Kimberly Cook-Nelson, Eliecer Viamontes, Greg Abbott, Drew Marsh, John Hudson, John Dinelli, Kathleen Jackson. Photo courtesy: Office of the Texas ...