The Guardian

Latest news, sport, business, comment, analysis and reviews from the Guardian, the world's leading liberal voice

I’ve turned AI into my therapist. The results were pretty disquieting

As part of our series AI for the People, our resident AI skeptic Rhik Samadder agreed to put his life in AI’s hands. This week: therapy

It’s Sunday morning, and I type my feelings into the chatbox, too wound-up to stop.

“I’ve become a carer to my 82-year-old mother,” I write. “Every day brings new problems. I help with hospital appointments, finances, gardening, shopping, home repairs, the council, insurance companies, letters, emails, endless IT problems …”

Continue reading...

Worried about the demise of reading? Come to France, where we’re up to our eyes in print | Alexander Hurst

From hefty literary magazines to thriving newspaper kiosks and book sales, the French publishing industry refuses to let printed matter die

It took me nine months of 20-hours-a-week French language instruction, and the mycelial network of a year spent in Strasbourg, to feel courageous enough to walk into a bookshop to buy something more challenging than Le Petit Prince. I was immediately humbled: there was an entire new universe, just barely linguistically accessible, and I had no idea who was who, who was writing what or what might interest me.

A year later, I came back to France for graduate school after an 11-month interlude working for an NGO in southern Chad, still feeling like an intellectual toddler in my now two-year-old second language. During the first week of courses, I asked a highly bilingual classmate where in the French media landscape I could find long-form narrative reporting with a literary edge – something comparable to the New Yorker. “You have to read XXI,” he told me, and then a few days later brought me a copy.

Alexander Hurst writes for Guardian Europe from Paris. His memoir Generation Desperation is out now

Continue reading...

‘I owe Iron Maiden my English A-level!’ The great literature our writers discovered through pop music

Ahead of World Book Day on Thursday, Guardian music writers pick out the musicians whose literary references illuminated them – from Adam Ant on Joe Orton to the National on Grace Paley

I first heard the Cure’s Charlotte Sometimes as a teenager, and it was like waking up from a dream. With dissonant guitar chiming like church bells and opaque lyrics about preparing for bed, it unburied a childhood memory of reading Penelope Farmer’s ghostly 1969 book of the same name. As a child I’d found it fantastical: on Charlotte’s first night at boarding school, she wakes to find herself 40 years in the past, in the body of someone else, with an unfamiliar moon in the sky. But as a teen, re-reading the story on Robert Smith’s recommendation, it held a mirror to my increasingly uncertain sense of self. To hear Charlotte’s disorientation play out through uneasy bass and Smith’s dizzying, doubled-up vocals was strangely comforting; confirmation that growing up has always felt like time-travelling. Learning that the band recorded it exactly 10 years, to the day, before I was born was further proof: my own cosmic link to a past life. Katie Hawthorne

Continue reading...

Israel carries out fresh strikes on Tehran and Beirut as Iran targets US bases in Gulf

Explosions heard across Iranian capital as Israeli military announces further ‘broad-scale strikes’ against regime

Israel has carried out another wave of strikes on Tehran and Beirut while Iranian missiles continued to fly toward Israel and the Gulf as the war with Iran entered its fifth day.

Explosions were heard across Tehran in the early hours of Wednesday morning as the Israeli military announced “broad-scale strikes” on Iranian regime targets. Police stations and Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) headquarters in the Kurdish regions of north-western Iran were also razed by strikes, Kurdish media reported.

Continue reading...

‘Thought it was a collapsed drain’: golf course sinkhole exposes lost wine cellar

Groundsman stumbles across room, sealed for more than 100 years, that was part of 12th-century Manchester hall

A sinkhole that opened up on a Manchester golf course has exposed a wine cellar abandoned for more than a century.

The cellar, along with dozens of empty wine and port bottles, was discovered by a groundsman who assumed the hole was nothing more than a collapsed drain.

Continue reading...

Slinger

Fabio Bruna posted a photo:

Slinger

Vogelplas Starrevaart

Vroem

Fabio Bruna posted a photo:

Vroem

Vogelplas Starrevaart

A Man Walks Into a Bar

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

A Man Walks Into a Bar

Happy Trails

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Happy Trails

Slashdot

News for nerds, stuff that matters

'Game of Thrones' Movie In the Works

Warner Bros. is developing a feature film set in the world of Game of Thrones with writer Beau Willimon of Andor and House of Cards. "That's about all we know right now, and as with everything 'Thrones' things could change, but the film is firmly in development," reports TheWrap. Page Six Hollywood was first to break the news and speculated that the story could revolve around Aegon I, the legendary Targaryen king who spawned a dynasty. From the report: The Targaryens have been at the center of all things "Thrones" on HBO, with "Game of Thrones" following Daenerys Targaryen's (Emilia Clarke) quest to usurp the throne, spinoff "House of the Dragon" set in the midst of the Targaryens' reign and recent spinoff "A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms" following the squire-ship of Aegon "Egg" Targaryen towards the end of the family's run atop the Iron Throne. All, of course, based on George R.R. Martin's expansive book universe.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The Moscow Times - Independent News From Russia

The Moscow Times offers everything you need to know about Russia: Breaking news, top stories, business, analysis, opinion, multimedia

Russia’s Prison Population Falls to Historic Low, Deputy Chief Justice Says

First Deputy Chief Justice Vladimir Davydov attributed the decline to the “humanization” of Russia’s law enforcement practices since President Vladimir Putin first took office.

VK: Voorpagina

Volkskrant.nl biedt het laatste nieuws, opinie en achtergronden

Luister naar Harry Styles’ nieuwe album vol stevige beats en je zíét de stadions al in rave-modus gaan

Luister naar Harry Styles’ nieuwe album vol stevige beats en je ziet de stadions al in een rave-modus gaan

De boswachter rook een chemische lucht in het bos. Toen moest het hele natuurgebied op de schop

Op de Brabantse Wal werd in 2021 een gigantische put met drugsafval gevonden. Om de grond te saneren moest een groot stuk bos worden gekapt. De boswachter zag het natuurgebied veranderen in een laboratorium. Nu durft hij te hopen op herstel.

In de Iraanse wijk van Los Angeles kan Donald Trump nooit meer stuk en wil men de kroonprins aan de macht

Met demonstraties, posters en vlaggen maken de Iraanse inwoners van Tehrangles hun vreugde over de Amerikaanse-Israëlische aanval op Iran duidelijk. „De Iraniërs zijn meer verenigd dan ooit, binnen en buiten het land. We gaan ons land terugpakken.”

Tokyo - A Miracle

nikkorglass has added a photo to the pool:

Tokyo - A Miracle

Tokyo Tower and surroundings as seen from Roppongi Hills Mori Tower

The Register

Biting the hand that feeds IT — Enterprise Technology News and Analysis

Doomscrollers despair after Oracle hiccup knocks TikTok offline in US

Big Red's cloud that 'doesn't go down' goes down again

An Oracle outage knocked parts of TikTok offline this week. The incident affected Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI), which trails AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud in market share but counts the social media behemoth among its customers.…

Rijnmond - Nieuws

Het laatste nieuws van vandaag over Rotterdam, Feyenoord, het verkeer en het weer in de regio Rijnmond

'Iedereen gaat vreemd', zingt Froukje, deze relatietherapeut denkt daar heel anders over

In haar nieuwe single 'Iedereen gaat vreemd' zingt Froukje dat ontrouw eigenlijk overal voorkomt. Het nummer is een radio-hit en wordt op Radio Rijnmond veel gedraaid. Maar gaat iedereen vreemd, klopt het wat Froukje zingt? Volgens een Rotterdamse relatietherapeut ligt het een stuk genuanceerder. “Nee, daar ben ik het niet mee eens. Zeker niet.”

'Iedereen gaat vreemd', zingt Froukje, maar klopt dat wel?

In haar nieuwe single 'Iedereen gaat vreemd' zingt Froukje dat ontrouw eigenlijk overal voorkomt. Het nummer is een radio-hit en wordt op Radio Rijnmond veel gedraaid. Maar gaat iedereen vreemd, klopt het wat Froukje zingt? Volgens een Rotterdamse relatietherapeut ligt het een stuk genuanceerder. “Nee, daar ben ik het niet mee eens. Zeker niet.”

Wel.nl

Minder lezen, Meer weten.

Sjiitische leider Irak roept moslims op solidair met Iran te zijn

De hoogste sjiitische geestelijke in Irak, grootayatollah Ali Al-Hussein al-Sistani, heeft de moslims opgeroepen solidair te zijn met Iran. Hij noemt de aanvallen van Israël en de VS op Iran "een ongerechtvaardigde oorlog".

Volgens al-Sistani moeten alle moslims deze oorlog veroordelen en het Iraanse volk steunen. Landen zouden zich volgens hem moeten uitspreken tegen de oorlog en op zoek moeten gaan naar een diplomatieke en vreedzame oplossing van de conflicten rond de Iraanse nucleaire projecten.

Rond de 60 procent van de Iraakse bevolking is sjiitisch. In Iran is dat rond de 90 procent. Al-Sistani is in Iran geboren.