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  • Japan is sweltering amid a heat wave not seen in decades. As the country deals with an energy crunch, businesses are trying to save energy by turning lights down and thermostats up.
  • A 2007 law could help the country meet its climate change goals by barring fossil fuels from new and remodeled federal buildings. But the law has been on hold and gas utilities want to repeal it.
  • Abby Grossberg, a producer for Tucker Carlson and Maria Bartiromo, alleges Fox News attorneys coerced her to lie under oath in a defamation case against the network. Fox fired her on Friday.
  • Sure, Beyoncé and Adele might scoop up even more awards for their collections. But with prizes being handed out in 91 categories, a lot of folks stand to see career boosts due to the Grammy Awards.
  • When a driver experienced a medical episode and was drifting into an intersection, people around her sprang into action and saved everyone on the road from a potentially life-threatening crash.
  • The U.S. saw more than one thousand train derailments last year, but industry leaders say traveling by rail remains one of the safest methods of transportation.
  • Ethics watchdogs are raising alarms after a report showed Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas accepted lavish gifts without disclosing them as required.
  • Saturday, Dec. 10, 2022 at 8:30 p.m. on KPBS 2 / On demand now with YouTube and KPBS Passport! We'll ramble through the venerable heart of Rome, admire breathtaking Bernini statues, go inside St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican, and mix and mingle with the Romans. Following an exquisite Roman dinner, we'll join locals after dark, lacing together the Eternal City's most romantic nightspots.
  • Musk's new "master plan" for Tesla didn't reveal any new vehicle models. Instead he presented a big-picture case for climate action, followed by smaller examples of innovations and cost-cutting.
  • Warwick's upcoming book launch The New Digital Enterprise by Ron Kagan long-time La Jolla resident focuses on our changing digital landscape -- both internal and external -- and how we connect to it to accelerate our efforts. The book is about the increase in remote work and growing market from remote customers. It focuses on building digital hubs to reach across these boundaries. It introduces newer technologies and management approaches that save time and expense by involving key individuals from the beginning. The hybrid workplace of today’s business culture we all now work in makes The New Digital Enterprise a tool that is more relevant than ever. And that boils downtown taking a new approach. The new book gives a blueprint to understand the needs and steps to empower employees and move forward on new endeavors (projects, new concepts you might have thought of in COVID downtown, etc). Everyone can relate to that sitting in our homes as we have. There is a buzz about this book in town already.
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