Some blind and low-vision fans will use a Super Bowl tactile device that lets them feel ball movement on a tablet, with live Westwood One audio in headphones to keep every play in sync.
When her doctor died suddenly in August, Tammy MacDonald found herself among the roughly 17% of adults in America without a primary care physician. MacDonald wanted to find a new doctor right away.
One portion of the article about Americans seeking refuge from the digital age caught my attention, ("Some Americans are finding refuge on analog islands amid digital seas," Jan. 2). I enjoyed reading ...
The report says AI is reshaping workflows across Asia’s content ecosystem, lowering costs and speeding delivery — advantages that increasingly accrue to the largest streaming and video platforms. By ...
For many years, we have not been allowed to mention God or Jesus to our students in public schools in the United States. Meanwhile, children have continued to be misguided and even harmed in our ...
Firefighters trudged through half a mile of snow in the dark to deal with a chimney fire. Shropshire Fire and Rescue Service said a crew from Ellesmere was was called to a house near Oswestry at 22:33 ...
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Watch the rubber band melt through the hand
A classic rubber band illusion that creates the visual of the band passing straight through the hand. It’s quick, visual, and relies on simple positioning rather than strength or complex moves, making ...
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