Rejoice always, pray continually, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.

1 Thessalonians 5:16-18

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Everyone Should Travel With a Pair of Cheap Wired Headphones (2026)


Admit it: It’s inevitable you will forget to charge your Bluetooth pair.

Gas prices won't return to pre-war levels any time soon


If a U.S.-Iran peace deal actually happens this time — and that's still a big if— consumers have a long road ahead before filling up returns all the way to the good old days of early 2026.

Why it matters: Even if the Strait of Hormuz opened right away, pump prices will likely remain higher — maybe a lot higher — than pre-war levels at least through the midterm elections.


  • U.S. retail prices are tethered to global oil markets that will be in turmoil for a while.
  • The average U.S. price for regular gasoline was $4.54 per gallon on Wednesday, compared to just under $3 pre-war, per AAA data.

What we're watching: Some price relief would come within days of the Strait of Hormuz truly reopening, per Patrick De Haan of the market data and analysis firm GasBuddy.

  • But the rest of the recovery would take longer. He sees prices coming down by about a third of the wartime jump within one to three months.
  • "The next third might take 3-6 months, and we'd finally get back to pre-war prices I'd say right now in early/mid 2027," De Haan, the firm's head of petroleum analysis, tells me via email.

Between the lines: The reasons it will take so long are rooted in both global fuel movements and the economics of retail pricing at home.

  • Reviving oil loadings and transit from the Mideast will take time, and so will bringing back the crude production that Persian Gulf producers dialed down when export routes were cut off.

"Even assuming a true and lasting end to the military conflict, it would still be several months before traffic through the Strait of Hormuz returns to its pre-war level," Rob Smith, a top fuels analyst with S&P Global Energy, said via email.

  • Other analysts agree. The consultancy Rystad Energy, in a note, argues that a 30-day phased reopening of the Strait would be an "optimistic scenario," and "meaningful volume recovery would happen in June at the earliest."

How it works: In the short term, even when oil prices fall — which they have already this week on news of progress toward a deal — gas stations are working through the higher cost inventory they bought when prices were higher.

  • It's one of the reasons market-watchers point out the "rocket and feathers" dynamic — retail fuel costs shoot up when oil prices do, but can decline slowly even when crude falls sharply.

Threat level: One big unknown is what "normal" in the Strait of Hormuz will even mean in the future.

  • Check out this new Foreign Affairs essay by Gregory Brew of the Eurasia Group, a political risk consultancy.
  • "Having demonstrated it once, Iran can now credibly threaten to shut down the Strait of Hormuz in the future. Its military capabilities have been degraded but not destroyed. It would take little effort for Iran to deter shippers from resuming traffic," he writes.
  • One of his recommendations is for U.S. development finance agencies supporting projects in the region to expand pipeline networks to bypass the Strait.

The bottom line: "U.S. gasoline prices would ... decline in the months following an end to the war but would be unlikely to return to pre-war levels before the end of the year," said Smith, the S&P analyst.


I Wore This $18 Casio Watch Every Day at Summer Camp, and It Still Works Perfectly Years Later


It stood up to bumps, lake water, and hours of activities.

Flash Flood Warnings Issued as 70 mph Winds, Large Hail Expected


Heavy downpour is on its way in the south.

The metaverse isn't a place: Why Animoca’s Yat Siu says the future is 100 billion AI agents


Yat Siu said the metaverse is evolving beyond immersive digital worlds, with AI agents increasingly handling commerce, payments and coordination through blockchain infrastructure in the background.

How Elon grew to love Anthropic


Elon Musk's surprise Anthropic deal allows him to accomplish two things at once: turn unused compute into revenue before an expected SpaceX IPO next month — and stick it to his archrival, Sam Altman.

Why it matters: Musk went from calling Anthropic "evil" to doing business with it in three months, showing how quickly competition can give way to strategic necessity in the AI race.


The big picture: The deal helps Anthropic address one of its most pressing problems — a severe compute deficit. The company saw "80x growth per year in revenue and usage" for the first quarter of 2026, CEO Dario Amodei said at a developer conference Wednesday, when it only planned for 10x.

  • That demand spike gave the AI lab "difficulties with compute," Amodei added, referencing recent usage limits that have frustrated customers.
  • Enter SpaceX, which will provide the AI lab with the entire capacity of its Colossus 1 data center, amounting to more than 300 megawatts of new capacity (over 220,000 Nvidia GPUs) within the month.
  • xAI, Musk's AI lab that SpaceX acquired, will continue to run off Colossus 2, a separate supercomputer.
  • "As part of this agreement, Anthropic also expressed interest in partnering to develop multiple gigawatts of orbital AI compute capacity," SpaceX said in a blog post.

The intrigue: The deal comes as Musk is embroiled in a lawsuit against OpenAI, the AI lab he co-founded that also happens to be Anthropic's biggest competitor.

  • "Elon's enemy is Sam. Dario's enemy is Sam. Enemy of my enemy is a compute partner," Ben Pouladian, who does tech market research, wrote on X.
  • Musk publicly attacked Anthropic on X in February, calling it "misanthropic" in response to the AI lab announcing its $380 billion post-money valuation. (Anthropic is now expected to be valued closer to $900 billion.)
  • Now, Musk says he "was impressed" after meeting with senior Anthropic leaders last week.

Follow the money: It's not just about personalities or competition. The deal makes financial sense for both parties, especially as Musk's xAI has a very different demand curve than Anthropic.

  • Musk has a history of over-investing in infrastructure relative to product demand, PitchBook's Harrison Rolfes tells Axios via email. (In 2024, OpenAI scooped up capacity originally intended for Musk.)
  • "xAI's Colossus 1 ended up with capacity that Grok's user base never grew into," Rolfes said.
  • By leasing that capacity to Anthropic, Musk turns an idle, expensive asset into a high-margin revenue stream for SpaceX, just in time for its June S-1 filing. That will allow him to avoid a multi-billion dollar write-down on unused chip capacity before the company is expected to go public.
  • Instead, SpaceX can go public with Anthropic as a customer.

Yes, but: Musk wouldn't have lent this spare capacity to a competing AI lab if he had the same demand problem Amodei describes having at Anthropic.

  • The company is only utilizing 11% of the potential of its massive chips stash, per The Information, though it's unclear how much of that is driven by lack of demand, low utilization or a combination.

The bottom line: Anthropic has the cash Musk needs to shore up his company's balance sheet before it goes public, and Musk has the compute Anthropic needs to meet user demand and continue its exponential revenue growth.


Dirty nickel: The cost of mining in Indonesia


Across six locations in Indonesia, NPR spoke with locals about how nickel mining is changing the land and daily life. It's brought jobs, but also concerns about environmental damage and public health.

PyPI Packages Deliver ZiChatBot Malware via Zulip APIs on Windows and Linux


Cybersecurity researchers have discovered three packages on the Python Package Index (PyPI) repository that are designed to stealthily deliver a previously unknown malware family called ZiChatBot on Windows and Linux systems. "While these wheel packages do implement the features described on their PyPI web pages, their true purpose is to covertly deliver malicious files," Kaspersky 

Border czar promises 'mass deportations are coming' to fulfill Trump's promises


The remarks contrast with Border Czar Tom Homan's softer messaging earlier this year, after two U.S. citizens were killed by immigration officials in Minneapolis.


Popular Clothing Retailer Carter's Closing 150 Locations


A popular clothing retailer is closing 150 locations over the next three years and 100 locations by the end of 2026.

Making a podcast helped one family talk about aging, dementia and death


This year's winner in NPR's College Podcast Challenge is a letter to a grandparent that grapples with health issues including dementia. It's the story of a family learning to talk about hard things.

In new poll, Americans voice broad bipartisan support for age caps in Congress


The vast majority of Americans — 8 in 10 — say there should be age caps for members of Congress, as well as term limits, according to the latest NPR/PBS News/Marist Poll.

Campaign staffers tell NPR they make 'thousands' betting on their own candidates


Campaign staffers are turning private polling data into personal paydays. They describe election prediction market as a "Wild West" for staffers.

Netflix Quietly Changes User Interface, Subscribers Complain


Netflix quietly made a change to its interface that has users questioning its decision.

Max Homa’s Burrito Headcover Is Back—And It’s Even Cooler This Time


Golf has always had its share of traditions—pressed polos, pristine fairways, and clubs that look like they belong in a museum case. But every now and then, something cuts through the noise and reminds you that the game doesn’t have to take itself so seriously.  Enter Max Homa’s (now-viral) ...

Best horse racing betting sites: Where to bet on the 2026 horse racing


Learn where to bet on horse racing online, including for the Preakness Stakes on May 16. Discover top horse racing betting sites and tips.

Morning news brief


Trump says the U.S. is close to a deal to end the Iran war, the Iran war has pushed global oil prices up, but there's no sign of a huge surge in U.S. production, Marco Rubio visits Pope Leo.

RGG's Stranger Than Heaven game arrives this winter


The game, from the creators of Yakuza, will focus on the founder of the Tojo clan.

Top BJP leader's aide shot dead in violence after Indian state election


Chandranath Rath was personal assistant to Suvendu Adhikari, front runner to become West Bengal's new chief minister.

AI is quietly splitting the housing market in two: Bay Area luxury homes are up 13%, affordable ones are collapsing


“It’s another sign of the K-shaped economy taking shape in the Bay Area,” said Redfin senior economist Yingqi Xu.

About 40 passengers previously left ship hit by Hantavirus at island of St. Helena


The dozens of passengers, including the wife of a Dutch man who died, left the cruise ship during a stop at the British territory, the Dutch foreign ministry said on Thursday.

Paris Saint-Germain returns to Champions League final after beating Bayern Munich


The French league leader will face Arsenal in the final in Budapest, Hungary, on May 30, after the Gunners defeated Atletico Madrid 1-0 on Tuesday to progress 2-1 on aggregate.

Driver arrested after chasing down child cyclist on footpath


A driver was arrested chasing down a boy who was riding his bike in a neighbourhood in the US city of Cheney.

Watch: Passengers told virus-hit ship 'not infectious' after first death


YouTuber Ruhi Çenet was on board the ship, and filmed the announcement made on 12 April.

Samsung says its Galaxy Watch can predict fainting with 'high accuracy'


The feature would allow users to get into a safe position or call for help.

I litigated the JetBlue-Spirit merger. A few thoughts on the future of antitrust in the airline industry


A former DOJ Antitrust Division attorney who worked on the JetBlue/Spirit case argues that Spirit's collapse wasn't inevitable — but it should give regulators, airlines, and policymakers lessons on how competition works in the skies”

Alan Jackson's 'Chattahoochee' Named the 'Song With the Most Iconic Intro' In Country Music


A new ranking names Alan Jackson’s 1993 summer anthem as the gold standard for opening riffs.

Islamic State-linked families arrive home in Australia from Syria


A group of nine women and children has landed in Melbourne with another woman and her child expected in Sydney.

Federal authorities arrest 18 for alleged drug distribution around Los Angeles park


The area, called MacArthur Park, is a densely populated immigrant neighborhood west of downtown LA where federal immigration authorities and the National Guard made a brief show of force last summer.

Meet Mark Stevens: The billionaire VC, Nvidia board member, and Giving Pledge signer who just donated $200 million to USC


Billionaire venture capitalist Mark Stevens, an early Nvidia backer at Sequoia Capital, just made one of the largest gifts in USC history to fuel the university's AI ambitions.

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