May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.

Romans 15:13

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12 Best Natural Shampoos and Conditioners in 2026


You can count on these picks to effectively cleanse, clarify, nourish, and strengthen your hair.

The Best S&P 500 ETF to Invest $500 in Right Now
Motley Fool  |  18 Mar 14:00  |  002 • 3854

Adidas' Retro-Inspired Basketball Shoes Are on Sale for Only $36


It's a slam dunk price on a solid pair of kicks in time for March Madness.

Stock Index Futures Muted as Oil Prices Resume Advance After Iran Strikes, FOMC Meeting in Focus
Barchart  |  18 Mar 14:00  |  004 • 3854

Jamaican food group Seprod sells biscuits business
Just Food  |  18 Mar 14:00  |  005 • 3854

Canada Mortgage Billionaire Buys Stake in The Economist Magazine
Bloomberg  |  18 Mar 14:00  |  006 • 3854

F.D.A. Investigates 7 E. Coli Illnesses as Raw Dairy Farm Denies Any Link


The outbreak has sickened people in California, Texas and Florida. The agency said Cheddar cheese products from Raw Farm are “the likely source,” but the company denies it and has not recalled them.

Retired Belgian Diplomat, 93, Faces Trial Over 1961 Killing of Congolese Leader


A Brussels court ruled that Étienne Davignon must stand trial for the murder of Patrice Lumumba, the first prime minister of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

KFC's New Pepsi Comes With a Side of Pickle Juice


The peculiar new product is part of a larger pickle lineup hitting select stores in late March.

Why spring equinox auroras shine brightest in March and where to catch them


The spring equinox auroras are set to dazzle skies worldwide on March 20, lighting up the night with a breathtaking spectrum of colors.

Stock-Market Euphoria Fades as Investors Turn Bearish, BofA Says
Bloomberg  |  18 Mar 14:00  |  011 • 3854

New York is suing the Trump Administration again—This time over $58 million in withheld subway funding


The MTA's lawsuit is the latest clash between the federal government and New York officials over billions in promised transportation money.

This Ecovacs Robot Vacuum/Mop Combo Is 40% Off Right Now


A CES award-winner with 4WD navigation, 19,500Pa suction, and self-cleaning.

Cesar Chavez Helped Spark a Texas Farmworker Uprising


Farmworkers in Texas took cues from strikes Chavez helped lead in California to demand better pay and more rights.

Empire Metals, Atlantic Lithium, ImmuPharma, IP Group, Light Science Technologies, ATOME
Proactive  |  18 Mar 14:00  |  015 • 3854

XRP leapfrogs BNB to take fourth most valuable crypto spot


The jump comes as Ripple expands in Brazil.

Applebee’s Catches March Madness with a Huge Deal on Wings


Applebee’s is now running a limited-time special on wings in celebration of March Madness, and it’s a great one. Here’s what you need to know about it.

The Fed holds rates steady and punts on the Middle East: ‘uncertain’


The infamous dot-plot shows sharper-than-ever divisions between Fed officials.

U.S. Intelligence Saw No Change in Iran’s Missile Capabilities Before War


On Wednesday, the director of national intelligence and C.I.A. director contradicted one of the justifications the Trump administration had given for its attacks on Iran.

This 'Dune' Star Has Only One Scene in the Third Film


She may appear in the first trailer for Dune: Part Three, but don’t expect to see much of Rebecca Ferguson's Lady Jessica in the new film. New footage released by Warner Bros. on Tuesday, March 17, confirms Ferguson's Bene Gesserit Reverend Mother will pop up on screen in the movie. Her appearance, ...

See it: Entire house on small North Carolina highway creates unusual traffic jam


An entire house being transported off an exposed North Carolina beach last week created an unusual traffic jam that was caught on video.

Here’s One Operational Upgrade I’d Put In Place to Protect Franchises from Peak-Hour Chaos


When scaling exposes friction, unreliable connectivity is often one of the hidden forces quietly getting in the way.

AI Is Making Leaders Question Their Worth. Here’s the Psychological Shift They Must Make.


As AI accelerates, the real competitive advantage may belong to those who can separate identity from output and lead without defensiveness.

Fortune Brands new CEO never officially worked a day—but he’ll get $18.4 million after a massive leadership shakeup


The son-in-law of activist billionaire Nelson Peltz triggered the shakeup—and now he's getting a board seat and a say in who runs the company next

Today’s Bob Iger’s last day leading Disney. Here’s what comes next at the company worth $176 billion


Josh D’Amaro, who’s been with Disney for 28 years, takes over today, ending Iger’s nearly two decades tenure leading the company.

Hubble catches rare view of a comet crumbling


NASA and ESA have released new images from the Hubble Space Telescope of a comet breaking up as it exits the solar system, captured as part of study recently published in the journal Icarus. The images are notable not only because they offer a more detailed view of the inside of a comet, which could offer new information about the early days of the universe, but also because they were taken by accident.

Photographing K1, or "Comet C/2025 K1" as it's officially known, wasn't the original intention of the study. "This comet [was] observed because our original comet was not viewable due to some new technical constraints after we won our proposal," John Noonan, a research professor in the Department of Physics at Auburn University in Alabama said. "We had to find a new target — and right when we observed it, it happened to break apart, which is the slimmest of slim chances."

The comet broke up over a period of days into "at least four pieces," each with a "fuzzy envelope of gas and dust" around them, with Hubble specifically capturing the disassembly from November 8 through November 10, 2025. K1 was interesting before it started to crumble because at "around 8 kilometers across" (about 5 miles), it's larger than the average comet, and having footage of it shattering will likely offer new insights into the physics of comets in general. Additionally, the lack of carbon in the gases released by the comet as it broke is apparently "chemically very strange," which suggests the composition of K1 could bear scientific fruit, too.

Hubble has tracked comets of different sizes and compositions for years. Studying them remains a focus because comets are frequently made of ice and rock from the primordial period when solar systems were first forming. The ESA hopes to dramatically expand our understanding of that period with its "Comet Interceptor" mission, which is supposed to launch in 2028 or 2029, and aims to use photos captured from multiple angles to create a 3D model of a comet.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/science/space/hubble-catches-rare-view-of-a-comet-crumbling-185817544.html?src=rss

Cesar Chavez abused and raped women and girls, NYT investigation says


A New York Times investigation has revealed allegations that the late renowned labor leader abused girls and raped Dolores Huerta, his longtime organizing partner.

Iran’s South Pars Gas Field Is Attacked, Sending Energy Prices Soaring


The field is part of a vast gas reservoir shared by Iran and Qatar. The strike appeared to be one of the most significant attacks on an energy site since the U.S.-Israeli air war against Iran began.

Perplexity's Comet AI browser is now available for iPhones


Perplexity's Comet AI browser is now available as a standalone app for iPhone users. The tool initially debuted last summer on PCs, but cost $200 a month. The new app is free, as is the recently-released Android version.

Comet is an AI-powered browser, which has become a hot product category throughout the past year or so. This is basically a web browser combined with a chatbot that can perform some tasks on a user's behalf. Like related tools, people can ask it to summarize a webpage or conduct additional research for more context about a subject.

Perplexity says that Comet "acts as a personal assistant and thinking partner" to "turn curiosity into momentum." Those are certainly words. The company boasts that folks can use the tool to shop and make schedules. I advise some caution for both of these tasks, given that AI browsers are notorious marks that easily fall for various online scams.

One cool thing here is that the app takes full advantage of Apple's Liquid Glass technology. It certainly looks easy on the eyes and that address bar really pops. The iOS version does suffer from some limitations inherent to Apple's walled-garden approach, according to a preview by MacStories. Users cannot install third-party extensions here, though it can be made the default browser.

Finally, there's a privacy concern worth considering. Perplexity has been open about the fact that it uses browsers in part to collect customer data for ad targeting. There's a reason why something that used to cost $200 is now available for free.

The Comet browser is now available for iPhones, Android devices, Windows PCs and Macs. There isn't a native iPad app yet, but the standard Perplexity app is available for Apple's tablets so maybe the browser will follow suit.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/apps/perplexitys-comet-ai-browser-is-now-available-for-iphones-183947569.html?src=rss

2026 NCAA women's Frozen Four ice hockey: How to watch on ESPN


The NCAA Frozen Four action will unfold Friday at Penn State's Pegula Ice Arena in University Park, Pennsylvania.

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