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Amazon Great Republic Day Sale: Samsung, Haier, and More Refrigerators Available With Discounts

Amazon Great Republic Day Sale 2026 is in full swing, offering various electronics, like smartphones, laptops, TVs, cameras, wireless speakers, truly wireless stereo (TWS) headsets, wearables, and smart home appliances, at relatively low prices. Customers can get an exchange bonus of up to Rs. 15,000 while buying their next refrigerator from brands like Samsung, Haier...

Gen Z Việt Nam và cuộc đua “giàu nhanh”: áp lực tài chính, so sánh xã hội và cách họ tự cứu mình

Thế hệ Gen Z Việt Nam đang sống giữa kỳ vọng thành công sớm, chi phí sinh hoạt leo thang và mạng xã hội khuếch đại hình mẫu giàu có. Áp lực "phải giàu nhanh" không chỉ là câu chuyện tâm lý mà còn là bài toán tài chính, nghề nghiệp và cách mỗi người chọn đối phó.

Oppo Find X9 Ultra Design Spotted in Real-Life Images With Bigger Telephoto Kit

The Oppo Find X9 Ultra is rumoured to be launched in China after the Spring Festival in February. Ahead of its anticipated debut, real-life images of the purported handset have surfaced on social media, revealing its design. It appears to be equipped with a flat display and an AI key on the left side of the frame. The Oppo Find X9 Ultra leaked images also hint towards...

OpenAI’s Age Prediction System to Detect Underage ChatGPT Users Is Now Rolling Out

OpenAI is finally rolling out its age verification system that was first announced in September 2025. The system is an artificial intelligence (AI) model that works behind the scenes across ChatGPT and collects “signals” from user activity to determine the age of the user. While the company does ask for the date of birth when an OpenAI account is first created, it...

Vigil by George Saunders review – will a world-wrecking oil tycoon repent?

The ghosts of Lincoln in the Bardo return to confront a dying oil man’s destructive legacy – but this time they feel like a gimmick

George Saunders is back in the Bardo – perhaps stuck there. Vigil, his first novel since 2017’s Booker prize‑winning Lincoln in the Bardo, returns to that indeterminate space between life and death, comedy and grief, moral inquiry and narrative hijinks. Once again, the living are largely absent, and the dead are meddlesome and chatty. They have bones to pick.

They converge at the deathbed of an oil man, KJ Boone. He’s a postwar bootstrapper: long-lived, filthy rich and mightily pleased with himself. “A steady flow of satisfaction, even triumph, coursed through him, regarding all he had managed to see, cause and create.” Boone is calm in his final hours, enviably so. He seems destined to die exactly as he lived, untroubled by self-reflection. But as his body falters, his mind becomes permeable to ghosts, and they have work to do. The tycoon has profited handsomely from climate denial, and there is still time for him to acknowledge his fossil-fuelled sins before the lights go out.

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