in | ||||||
NEWS | ||||||
In new book, fired FBI Director James Comey says Trump 'untethered to truth' The book, "A Higher Loyalty," describes Trump as being "untethered to truth" and calls his leadership of the country "ego driven and about personal loyalty." Comey said he regrets his approach and some of the wording he used in his July 2016 press conference in which he announced the decision not ...
| ||||||
The role of apprenticeships in the UK economy Polly Toynbee (Going nowhere fast: the lie of apprenticeships, 9 April) provides a much-needed focus on the dire state of apprenticeship provision in England. The recent report of the Commission on London at King's College London set out how to start tackling this. The mayor of London – and the ...
| ||||||
Israel is determined to stop Iran from establishing bases in Syria IN THE early hours of April 9th Israeli fighter jets crossed into Lebanese airspace and fired a salvo of cruise missiles eastward. Their target was the T-4 military airbase in central Syria (see map on previous page), not far from the ancient city of Palmyra. More specifically, the missiles were aimed at a ...
| ||||||
AI in banking: the reality behind the hype His dramatic ousting last weekend means he will not be held to that promise, but investors need not look far for other bankers talking up the potential of artificial intelligence to revolutionise an industry that has struggled with profitability in the decade since the financial crisis. Former Citigroup chief Vikram ...
| ||||||
Will Britain find a new role in the world after Brexit? Britain's imperial past distorts the debate about our place in the world, but not in the way that is commonly assumed. It is often asserted that claims about this country's international importance are a form of nostalgia. It would be more accurate to say that Britain tends to underestimate its power because it ...
| ||||||
Why trying to be too efficient will make us less efficient in the long run People in the Elizabethan times and even in the Middle Ages didn't have the concept of efficiency we do today. That really depended on the rise of thermodynamics in the 19th century and the need to get as much power as possible from water turbines and from steam engines. That efficiency of the 19th ...
| ||||||
You have received this email because you have subscribed to Google Alerts. |
Receive this alert as RSS feed |
Send Feedback |
No comments:
Post a Comment