Early Black Friday Deals on Smartwatches: Big Savings on Apple and Garmin
In a world where convenience is king, popularity around smartwatches is not surprising at all.
2023-11-23 02:19
Japan's 'King Kazu' extends Portugal deal aged 56
Kazuyoshi Miura will continue playing aged 56 after the former Japan international extended his loan deal with...
2023-07-12 11:18
Can You Switch Servers in Tower of Fantasy?
Is it possible to switch servers in Tower of Fantasy? Here's what you need to know.
1970-01-01 08:00
Millie Bobby Brown dances with security guard at Taylor Swift concert
From Blake Lively and Gigi Hadid to Matty Healy and Billy Joel, there have been a number of celebrities spotted in attendance at Taylor Swift's The Eras Tour at various shows. Stranger Things star Millie Bobby Brown is also another celeb that's been seen, and in a wholesome moment during a recent Cincinnati gig, she could be seen dancing and singing along with a security guard. In the viral TikTok clip posted by @swagmastercam both Millie and the security guard are singing their hearts out to Swift's hit song All Too Well (10 Minute Version, Taylor's Version, From The Vault). Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter The two can be seen holding hands and singing the lyrics to one another, in a heartwarming Swiftie exchange. "That moment when someone grabs your hand during atwtmv and sings w(ith) you and you realize it's THE Millie Bobby Brown," the onscreen text read. "Millie you made my entire life. Seriously such a genuine and kind person," the security guard added in the caption in the clip she posted of herself with the 19-year-old actor. @swagmastercam Millie you made my entire life. Seriously such a genuine and kind person. ❤️❤️❤️ #milliebobbybrown #eras #tserastour #cincy #cincinnati #erastourcincinnati #tserastour2023 #erastourcincy #tstheerastourcincinnati Since then the clip has amassed 6m views, 1.3m likes and plenty of comment from people who loved seeing the interaction. One person said: "Imagine being at the eras tour,AND MEETING MILLIE BOBBY BROWN! could never be me." "It probably felt so nice for her to get to experience a normal moment like this and not get immediately recognized or have the energy shift," another person wrote. A third added: "The fact that Millie randomly grabbed ur hand LOL." "This is the cutest main character moment ever," a fourth person commented. Someone else replied: "My sister met her AND GOT A BRACELET FROM HER," referring to Swifties often making themed friendship bracelets to exchange with each other at the concerts. Elsewhere, a Taylor Swift fan does a TV interview in disguise after calling in sick at work. Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-07-04 00:28
Mullins hits for cycle as Orioles top skidding Pirates 6-3
BALTIMORE (AP) — Cedric Mullins hit for the cycle for Baltimore, and his three-run homer in the eighth inning helped the Orioles to a 6-3 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Friday night.
1970-01-01 08:00
IRS whistleblowers to testify to Congress as they claim 'slow-walking' of Hunter Biden case
Whistleblowers claiming the Justice Department improperly interfered with a yearslong investigation into Hunter Biden will testify before Congress as House Republicans accelerate their probes into the president and his family
2023-07-19 12:07
Algorithm finds 600-foot, ‘potentially hazardous’ asteroid near Earth
An algorithm has spotted a nearly 600-foot, potentially hazardous asteroid near Earth. The tool is intended to find dangerous objects in Earth’s vicinity, to allow scientists to better track them and understand any threat they might pose. The new discovery is the system’s first detection of a “potentially hazardous” asteroid, a term that is used for those rocks that are near enough and possibly threatening enough to cause a danger to Earth. An asteroid gets the designation if it is within about 5 million miles of Earth’s orbit. The asteroid, known as 2022 SF289, does not pose any threat to Earth for the foreseeable future. Its closest approach brings it 140,000 miles from Earth – closer to us than the Moon, but still far enough away to be safe. But the creators of the algorithm said that it showed that the system could be used to detect others in the future – some of which may pose a threat to life on Earth. “By demonstrating the real-world effectiveness of the software that Rubin will use to look for thousands of yet-unknown potentially hazardous asteroids, the discovery of 2022 SF289 makes us all safer,” said scientist Ari Heinze, the principal developer of the algorithm, known as HelioLinc3D. Astronomers are looking forward to switching on the Vera C. Rubin Observatory, in Chile, in 2025. It will allow for a much more detailed view of the night sky. They hope that it can be used to spot more potentially hazardous asteroids, or PHAs. But the extra detail will also make more work for those poring through the data to find them, and so algorithms will be important to helping that work. HelioLinc3D is one such algorithm, and was built specifically to find asteroids within the Rubin observatory’s dataset. Though the equipment is not yet switched on, its creators looked to test whether it would successfully be able to find asteroids when it is looking through that data. The discovery of 2022 SF289 suggests that it will be. It was found in data from the ATLAS survey, based in Hawaii. ATLAS had actually seen the object three times on four separate nights, but an asteroid has to be seen four times on one night to be identified as a near-Earth object. “Any survey will have difficulty discovering objects like 2022 SF289 that are near its sensitivity limit, but HelioLinc3D shows that it is possible to recover these faint objects as long as they are visible over several nights,” said Denneau. “This in effect gives us a ‘bigger, better’ telescope.” Until now it had also been missed because it was passing in front of the busy and bright stars of the Milky Way. But scientists were able to confirm the existence of the object by looking back through data when they knew where to look. Scientists are aware of 2,350 PHAs already, but expect there are 3,000 out there waiting to be found. “This is just a small taste of what to expect with the Rubin Observatory in less than two years, when HelioLinc3D will be discovering an object like this every night,” said Rubin scientist Mario Jurić, director of the DiRAC Institute, professor of astronomy at the University of Washington and leader of the team behind HelioLinc3D. “But more broadly, it’s a preview of the coming era of data-intensive astronomy. From HelioLinc3D to AI-assisted codes, the next decade of discovery will be a story of advancement in algorithms as much as in new, large, telescopes.” Read More Reddit closes Place after obscene protests Kenya suspends eyeball-scanning crypto worldcoin Google warns Gmail users they could be about to lose their account Reddit closes Place after obscene protests Kenya suspends eyeball-scanning crypto worldcoin Google warns Gmail users they could be about to lose their account
2023-08-04 00:02
Treasury's Adeyemo, in New York, says tackling rural economic inequality essential
By Andrea Shalal Reversing a significant rise in inequality in the United States over the last four decades
2023-09-11 22:10
Writers and actors are missing new shows and movies as much as we are
Being rested has never been more stressful for writer and producer Felicia Pride. Pride, whose work includes credits on shows
2023-09-21 03:19
Collin Morikawa has roots in Lahaina. He's pledging $1,000 per birdie for Hawaii fires relief
Collin Morikawa is pledging $1,000 for every birdie he makes the next three PGA Tour events to help with relief for the deadly fires in Hawaii
2023-08-11 07:58
Take your IT career to the next level with this CompTIA prep course bundle
TL;DR: The Complete iCollege 2023 CompTIA Certification Course Super Bundle is on sale for £55.62,
2023-05-23 12:00
Does Andrew Tate despise basketball? What did controversial influencer say during live stream with Adin Ross?
It seems Andrew Tate has a vehement dislike for basketball, and his reasons are as peculiar as they get
2023-07-09 21:38
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