Saturday 25 August 2018

Giraffe Pillows And Bible Covers: New Report Details Booming Trade In U.S.

Giraffe Pillows And Bible Covers: New Report Details Booming Trade In U.S.More than 40,000 giraffe parts have been imported into the United States in




Face recognition nabs fake passport user at US airport

Face recognition nabs fake passport user at US airportFacial recognition technology was credited with the arrest this week of a man attempting to use a fake passport to enter the United States at Washington's Dulles airport, officials said. Officials said that on the third day of deployment of the new technology, border agents were able to determine that the man was using a fake French passport. US Customs and Border Protection, part of the Department of Homeland Security, said Dulles is one of 14 "early adopter airports" using facial recognition technology for the entry process, and began deploying it Monday.




Irish church's fall from grace haunts pope's Ireland trip

Irish church's fall from grace haunts pope's Ireland tripBLESSINGTON, Ireland (AP) — When St. John Paul II visited Ireland in 1979, the Catholic Church wielded such power that homosexuality, divorce, abortion and contraception were barely spoken of, much less condoned. Catholic bishops had advised the authors of Ireland's constitution, and still held sway.




Hold your hailing: AAA study finds using ride-sharing apps over twice the annual cost of car ownership

Hold your hailing: AAA study finds using ride-sharing apps over twice the annual cost of car ownershipThinking of ditching your car to save money now that you live in an urban area? Think again. A study by the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety published Tuesday found that using ride-hailing services like Uber and Lyft instead of owning a car would cost over twice as much annually on average. The study, which analyzed over 240,000 single-rider trips in 20 urban areas across the country, found an average cost of $13.15 for 15.11 minutes that covered 6.66 miles. AAA also found that the average urban driver covers 10,841 miles per year, which would make for a total cost of $20,118 if ride-hailing was used for all of those miles. MORE: Ohio senator wants to give car shoppers $3,500 to buy American-made cars “Whether you own a vehicle or not, ride-hailing services are a convenient transportation option,” said John Nielsen, a managing director at AAA. “However, with the average American city-dweller driving nearly 11,000 miles per year, a personal vehicle is still the more cost-effective choice. The average annual cost of owning a new vehicle (the costliest form of ownership), according to the AAA, rang in at an average of $7,321 annually, including car payments, insurance, fuel, and parking averaging anywhere from $706 in Phoenix to $8,088 in New York City. Interestingly, the study also included the average annual cost of ride-hailing over the same distance broken down by major metropolitan area, of which Boston was the most expensive at $27,545 per year, and Dallas was the least expensive, at $16,944. Eighteen other cities, from Atlanta to Seattle, were included in the results. Of course, it’s important to consider that ditching a car for city living would likely account for far fewer miles driven in a year, as public transportation, cycling, or even walking would reduce that total significantly. But if you were thinking Uber or Lyft was a convenient alternative to commuting with your own car, think again.




Manafort conviction: Only one juror held out on convicting Trump campaign chief of all counts

Manafort conviction: Only one juror held out on convicting Trump campaign chief of all countsJust one juror prevented former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort from being convicted of all 18 charges in his recent criminal trial, another juror has revealed. Manafort was found guilty of eight counts of bank and tax fraud on Tuesday following a three-week trial at a court in Alexandria, Virginia. Paula Duncan, a juror in the trial, said there was "one holdout" preventing unanimous agreement on the 10 other charges.




Fidelity fund votes backed Tesla, potential sign of more support

Cohen’s lawyer says senators failed to ask the right ‘follow-up questions’ in collusion probe

Cohen’s lawyer says senators failed to ask the right ‘follow-up questions’ in collusion probeMichael Cohen’s lawyer Lanny Davis says that members of the Senate Intelligence Committee failed to ask the right “follow-up questions” when his client appeared before the panel last year and therefore failed to elicit crucial answers about President Trump’s prior knowledge of Russian hacking of Democratic emails during the 2016 election.