
ChargePoint's stock slumps to record low after revenue warning, executive changes
By Chibuike Oguh NEW YORK ChargePoint Holdings' stock slumped by nearly 38% to a record low on Friday
2023-11-18 01:15

Pope to meet Palestinian delegation and relatives of Israeli hostages - sources
By Philip Pullella VATICAN CITY (Reuters) -Pope Francis is expected to meet next week with relatives of Jewish hostages held
2023-11-18 00:56

Apple to bridge message divide - but keeps green bubbles
The tech giant confirms it will introduce support for a new messaging standard on iPhones from 2024.
2023-11-18 00:48

Prominent US litigator David Boies to step down as law firm leader
By David Thomas David Boies, who became one of America's most prominent lawyers in cases involving Microsoft, the
2023-11-18 00:27

Cristiano Ronaldo vs Mohamed Salah: Who was the better player?
Comparing the Premier League careers of Cristiano Ronaldo and Mohamed Salah.
2023-11-18 00:24

Mortgage Growth in Canada Hasn’t Been This Weak Since 2001
Mortgage growth in Canada is the slowest it’s been in more than two decades as higher borrowing costs
2023-11-18 00:24

Birmingham people smuggling gang jailed over migrant operation
Some Vietnamese migrants ended up working in cannabis factories, the National Crime Agency says.
2023-11-18 00:21

A newly found ancient language in Turkey is yielding new discoveries
Archaeologists in Turkey are slowly unravelling the secrets of a previously unknown ancient language. And among them are revelations that long-forgotten civilisations used language to promote multiculturalism and political stability. The ancient clay tablets unearthed from archaeologists, in the ancient capital of the Hittite Empire at Hattusa, were recently found to contain the previously unknown language. Researchers had dusted off nearly 30,000 unique tablets at the scene – a UNESCO World Heritage Site – with most written in Hittite, and a few in the brand new language. The ongoing excavations have since revealed that the imperial civil service had whole departments whose job it was to research their subject peoples’ religions. Back in the second millennium BC, Hittite leaders told their officials to record religious ceremonies and other traditions of subject peoples by writing them in their respective local languages. The idea was that the traditions would be preserved and incorporated into the wider empire, in what appears to be a push towards multiculturalism. The fact that multiculturalism was such a prominent part of Bronze Age culture certainly has resonances in the modern day, where debates around immigration and multiculturalism continue to be a hot topic. So far, experts have found at least five subject ethnic groups who have had the treatment, with the latest example unearthed two months ago. It was written in a previously unknown Middle Eastern language that had been lost for up to 3,000 years. The language is being called Kalasmaic, because it would have been spoken by a subject people in an area called Kalasma in the northwest of the empire. And while only five minority languages have so far been found on the Bronze Age tablets, the reality is that there were probably at least 30, archaeologists say. Daniel Schwemer, a Wurzburg University professor who is leading the investigation into the newly discovered texts, said: “Bronze Age Middle Eastern history is only partly understood – and discovering additional clay tablet documents is helping scholars to substantially increase our knowledge.” How to join the indy100's free WhatsApp channel Sign up to our free indy100 weekly newsletter 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.
2023-11-18 00:17

EU Is Bystander in Musk’s X Drama as Powers Yet to Kick In
The European Union enacted a slew of new rules earlier this year to fight the kind of hate
2023-11-18 00:17

Billionaires Niel, Saadé and Schmidt Invest in €300 Million AI Lab
Billionaires Xavier Niel, Rodolphe Saadé and Eric Schmidt announced a new nonprofit artificial intelligence research lab in Paris,
2023-11-17 23:58

US Washout on Indo-Pacific Trade Deal Opens the Door to China
The economic core of the Biden administration’s much-touted Indo-Pacific strategy to counter China is fraying, frustrating allies even
2023-11-17 23:49

After breathtaking surge, U.S. stocks' path may rest on economic soft landing
By Lewis Krauskopf NEW YORK Are U.S. stocks poised to continue their dramatic run, or is a pause
2023-11-17 23:47