- NEW LAW HOLDS BIG COMPANIES LIABLE FOR FRAUD
- TICKETLESS TRAIN TRAVEL TRIAL LAUNCHES IN EAST MIDLANDS
- MORE THAN 800 DEAD AFTER EARTHQUAKE
- GPS SYSTEM FOR EU CHIEF’S PLANE JAMMED
- TRUMP SAYS HE WILL ORDER VOTER ID REQUIREMENT FOR EVERY VOTE
- EU CHIEF TOURS BELARUS BORDER
- SHANGHAI CORPORATION SUMMIT BEGINS IN CHINA
- PRE-BUDGET LIFT FOR RACHEL REEVES-UK
Author: Loveworld UK
The television has become such an integral part of homes in the modern world that it is hard to imagine life without television. Not just for entertainment value, but TV is also a valuable resource for information, advertising and different kinds of programming. Timeline of TV History In the late 1800s, Paul Gottlieb Nipkow, developed the first ever mechanical module of television. This technology was called the ‘electric telescope’ that had 18 lines of resolution. Around 1907, two separate inventors, A.A. Campbell-Swinton from England and Russian scientist Boris Rosing, used the cathode ray tube in addition to the mechanical…
Denmark will buy data leaked from the law firm at the heart of the Panama Papers scandal, Taxation Minister Karsten Lauritzen has announced. An anonymous offer to sell data involving up to 600 Danish citizens was made to the tax authorities over the summer, he said in a statement. “We owe it to all Danish taxpayers who faithfully pay their taxes,” he said. The decision was attacked as “deeply reprehensible” by a spokesman for one of the opposition parties. Germany, France and the UK are all believed to have paid for data on bank customers in the past but this…
Theresa May has told Conservative MPs she will not “turn the clock back” on grammar schools in England, but did not rule out some expansion. The prime minister was addressing the 1922 Committee of Conservative backbenchers on Wednesday evening. It comes after a document outlining proposals to open new grammar schools was caught by a photographer outside Downing Street on Tuesday. Labour said the policy would increase social exclusion if it went ahead. The government intends to publish its plans for school reform in the autumn. Grammar schools are state secondaries whose pupils are selected by examination at age 10…
Earpieces will have to be wireless or connect to the charging socket on the new handset – and some people aren’t happy about it. Apple’s newest iPhone will be water resistant and come without a headphone socket, the firm has confirmed. The tech giant unveiled the iPhone 7 and its 10 major new features in San Francisco on Wednesday. Both the camera and speakers will be “hugely advanced”, Apple chief executive Tim Cook confirmed at a live conference. The phone will also have better graphics and a more responsive home button. And, in what will be a huge plus for millions of users, battery life…
US firm Liberty Media has bought Formula One motor racing in a £6bn deal. The takeover of the sport was confirmed by Liberty bosses after it was first reported by Sky News City Editor Mark Kleinman on Wednesday evening. CVC Capital Partners is handing over its ownership after taking a controlling stake in 2005. Liberty is backed by American media tycoon John Malone. Sources have previously said the takeover will see the sport gain a public stock listing for the first time through a tracking stock called Liberty Media Group. The takeover will yield a windfall of more than $400m (£300m) for…
Pastor Chris prophetically declares September 2016 to be ‘the Month of Gathering Sheaves’! In declaring the word of the month, the man of God, Rev. (Dr.) Chris Oyakhilome referenced Psalm 126:6, which reads “He that goeth forth and weepeth, bearing precious seed, shall doubtless come again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him.” The man of God, who had just declared blessings over the brethren’s tithes, offerings and seeds in the past month, went on to deliver the mind of the Spirit to specially favor the brethren this month. As Pastor declared September ‘the Month of Gathering Sheaves’, shouts of…
Like anyone, no Paralympian is born great whatever privileges and opportunities they are born into. But some Paralympians more than others have the chance of greatness thrust upon them, catching them entirely unawares. Born into a family of Liverpool fanatics, Sean Highdale was picked up by the club at the age of nine and earmarked for big things. “I’d be kicking a ball about with my dad,” says Highdale, “and people would say to him: ‘Your boy’s gonna be some player.'” Maybe they were onto something. But would they find out? Playing in the same Under-18s side as Tom Ince,…
Uber has won the right to take Transport for London (TfL) to court over new rules that would force its drivers to pass English tests. TfL wanted all private-hire drivers who are not from English-speaking countries to be tested from 1 October. Uber said it had successfully applied for judicial review of some regulations put forward in TfL’s licensing proposals for private-hire drivers. A TfL spokesman said it was making the changes “to enhance public safety”. The examination would test reading, writing and listening skills. ‘Threaten livelihoods’ Uber will also challenge the requirement that all private-hire companies must have a…
Hurricane Hermine has made landfall in northern Florida, becoming the first hurricane to hit the state in 11 years. Hermine hit the Florida Gulf Coast early on Friday as a category one hurricane, bringing with it a heavy storm surge. Governor Rick Scott declared a state of emergency for 51 counties as residents were braced for the dangerous storm. Wind gusts reached 80mph (130km/h) on Thursday, the National Hurricane Center (NHC) said. City officials in the state capital Tallahassee, which is in the path of the storm, said at least 70,000 homes were now without power. Weather officials in the…
Campaigners say they have identified almost 400 refugee children living in the camp in Calais known as the Jungle who are eligible to come to the UK. They are urging Home Secretary Amber Rudd to accept the children – many of whom reportedly have family in Britain. The list is to be handed in at the Home Office, marking the anniversary of the drowning of three-year-old Syrian refugee Alan Kurdi one year ago. The Home Office says it already plans to transfer 150 children this year. Most vulnerable Celebrities including Juliet Stevenson and Vanessa Redgrave, religious leaders and local politicians…
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