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Rubio says US and Europe 'belong together' despite tensions
Rubio says US and Europe'belong together' despite tensions Marco Rubio has assured European leaders the US does not plan to abandon the transatlantic alliance, saying its destiny will always be intertwined with the continent's. The US secretary of state told the Munich Security Conference: We do not seek to separate, but to revitalise an old friendship and renew the greatest civilisation in human history. He criticised European immigration, trade and climate policies, but the overall tenor of the closely-watched speech was markedly different to Vice-President JD Vance's at the same event last year, during which he scolded continental leaders. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said she was very much reassured by Rubio's remarks. Rubio, the Trump administration's most senior diplomat, said it was neither our goal nor our wish to end the transatlantic partnership, adding: For us Americans, our home may be in the Western Hemisphere, but we will always be a child of Europe.
Rubio speech signals US-Europe relations are bruised but still friendly
World leaders, including French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, have been gathering in Munich for Europe's biggest security and defence conference. The burning question on everyone's minds: is America still an ally of Europe? The keynote speech that everyone was waiting for was from Marco Rubio, the US Secretary of State. Would he repeat the attacks made on Europe last year by the US Vice President JD Vance? Or would he be conciliatory?
World's rules-based order 'no longer exists', Germany's Merz warns
The rules-based world order no longer exists, the German Chancellor has warned at a major security summit. Opening the annual Munich Security Conference, Friedrich Merz told other world leaders that our freedom is not guaranteed in an era of big power politics, and that Europeans must be ready to make sacrifice. He also admitted that a deep divide has opened between Europe and the United States. The conference is taking place on the backdrop of US President Donald Trump threatening Denmark's sovereignty over Greenland by pledging to annex the Arctic territory and his tariffs on imports from European nations. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who was listening to Merz and will deliver his own speech on Saturday, earlier spoke of a new era in geopolitics.
9 new butterflies discovered in old museum archives
The team even extracted DNA from a tiny 100-year-old butterfly leg. Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent every weekday. When you think of butterflies, chances are you imagine unmistakable insects with bright, bold wings. But it turns out that individual butterfly species are sometimes shockingly difficult to tell apart. "Thanks to the genetic revolution and the collaboration of researchers and museums in various countries led by London's Natural History Museum, century-old butterflies are now speaking to us," Christophe Faynel, an entomologist at the Société entomologique Antilles Guyane, said in a statement .
What's X.AI? Elon Musk plans to create a new AI startup - TechStory
Elon Musk, who has recently voiced fierce opposition to artificial intelligence, appears to be developing something in this area. The Wall Street Journal and The Financial Times report that Musk is the founder of the new artificial intelligence business X.AI Corp. The newly formed company has been established in Nevada and specifies Musk as its only director in addition to Jared Birchall, the head of his family's workplaces, as its secretary, according to a regulatory file from last month that sources claimed to have viewed. The multi-company leader is rumored to have a particular fondness for the word "X" and recently rebranded Twitter, Inc. as X Corp. With his present positions as CEO of Tesla and Twitter, Mr. Musk doesn't seem to be planning to slow down.
Whatever happened to the Next Big Things? – TechCrunch
In tech, this was the smartphone decade. In 2009, Symbian was still the dominant'smartphone' OS, but 2010 saw the launch of the iPhone 4, the Samsung Galaxy S, and the Nexus One, and today Android and iOS boast four billion combined active devices. Today, smartphones and their apps are a mature market, not a disruptive new platform. The question presupposes that something has to be next, that this is a law of nature. It's easy to see why it might seem that way. Over the last thirty-plus years we've lived through three massive, overlapping, world-changing technology platform shifts: computers, the Internet, and smartphones.