COCOA, Fla. — It’s been said that life is just like potter’s clay because it gets shaped by our own hands. And nowhere is that truer than a place called Outlaw Pottery in Brevard County. Each week, ...
Researchers into class inequality in the creative industries have made recommendations to help increase working class representation in the workplace. Leaders of an inquiry into working class ...
When the advocacy group Everytown for Gun Safety announced it would be introducing a robust new array of classes to help people safely buy, use and store firearms, the decision caught some longtime ...
Access to high school computer science courses has plateaued, and overall high school student participation in those classes has declined slightly, concludes Code.org’s annual report on the state of ...
Microsoft’s new Copilot function in Excel lets users generate, analyze and explain data directly from cell formulas, marking a major step toward full AI integration within spreadsheets. Microsoft’s ...
Twelve individuals in the Coach category have moved one step closer to election as part of the Pro Football Hall of Fame's Class of 2026 presented by Visual Edge IT. The Hall of Fame's Coach ...
If your new phone no longer supports SIM cards, or you don't want to use them anymore, you can convert to eSIM instead. I started my career with CNET all the way back in 2005, when the (original) ...
Sure, it’s just October, months away from graduation. But it’s a good time to be thinking about what’s next. When you graduate, you’re still in celebration mode. You’ve tossed your caps in the air, ...
What do the U.S. Constitution, birthday cards and your signature have in common? They’re (likely) all in cursive. However, becoming fluent in this form of penmanship, once the hallmark of a good ...
The breach hit core JavaScript libraries such as chalk and strip-ansi, downloaded billions of times each week, raising alarms over the security of open-source software. Hackers have compromised widely ...
According to recent reports, sophisticated criminal networks are using identity theft to disguise themselves as students at U.S. colleges. They flood colleges with applications in order to siphon off ...