PSE electric, gas rate hikes approved The approved rate increases are higher than what was approved in December 2022 during PSE’s last rate case. During that case, PSE increased electric and gas rates around 11% and 8%, respectively, over ... 01/17/2025 - 7:01 am | View Link
With sky-high electric rates in Mass., will consumers buy in to heat pumps? While many homeowners say they’re happy with their purchase, and saw just slightly higher bills during cold months in recent years, many hit with big bills this winter say they’re feeling buyer's ... 01/16/2025 - 10:07 pm | View Link
We could see higher electric costs Pennsylvanians could face higher electricity bills if federal regulators don’t force the state’s grid operator to fix a “broken process” that artificially affects supply, Gov. Josh ... 01/11/2025 - 12:12 am | View Link
Sacramento Report: Wildfires and Climate Programs Drive Electric Rates Hikes How California’s fight against climate change could hinder its own goals. Also, a sneak peek at this year’s bills. 01/10/2025 - 10:00 am | View Link
Legislators at odds over electric rates after Energy and Technology Committee holds first meeting of the year Despite underlying partisan tension over the cost of electricity in Connecticut, the year’s first meeting of the legislature’s Energy and Technology Committee went on without any flare ups. After the ... 01/9/2025 - 10:16 am | View Link
Working in tech and gaming makes you lazy. True fact. Life is filled with a constant stream of new gadgets and goodies all of which are aimed at making your life easier, often at the expense of moving. True progress, but with certain devices, and we are going to look at one today, true convenience isn’t the most important thing on offer.
I have been generally smartening up Castle McNally for the past 18 months.
At the start of the pandemic we all suddenly found ourselves propped up on kitchen chairs in front of laptops or, even worse, hunched on those spare chairs that only come out of storage at Christmas when you have more people around than you can comfortably cope with.
One set of people didn’t have this issue and that was gamers, and particularly gamers who had discovered “gaming chairs”.
SAN FRANCISCO — When he was still a boy making long, tedious trips between his school and his woodsy home in the mountains during the 1980s, JoeBen Bevirt began fantasizing about flying cars that could whisk him to his destination in a matter of minutes.
As CEO of Joby Aviation, Bevirt is getting closer to turning his boyhood flights of fancy into a dream come true as he and latter-day versions of the Wright Brothers launch a new class of electric-powered aircraft vying to become taxis in the sky.
The aircraft — known as “electric vertical take-off and landing vehicle, or eVTOL — lift off the ground like a helicopter before flying at speeds up to 200 miles per hour (322 kilometers per hour) with a range of about 100 miles (161 kilometers).
WASHINGTON — On a recent Tuesday morning outside Union Station’s train hall in Washington, a stream of taxicabs, Ubers and Lyfts pulled to the curb to pick up passengers.
In the mix, too, was another type of vehicle.
“Right there,” said Jonathan Rogers, the head of the city’s Department of For-Hire Vehicles, pointing to an unmarked sedan dropping off a passenger.
An oil and gas company that has been battling the state for several years over what regulators say is a pattern of violations is suing to overturn an order imposing a $2.3 million penalty and restrictions on its ability to sell its oil and gas.
In a lawsuit filed Tuesday, Denver-based K.
By MARK SHERMAN, Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — TikTok said it will have to “go dark” this weekend unless the outgoing Biden administration assures the company it won’t enforce a shutdown of the popular app after the Supreme Court on Friday unanimously upheld the federal law banning the app unless it’s sold by its China-based parent company.
The Supreme Court in its ruling held that the risk to national security posed by TikTok’s ties to China overcomes concerns about limiting speech by the app or its 170 million users in the United States.
The decision came against the backdrop of unusual political agitation by President-elect Donald Trump, who vowed that he could negotiate a solution, and the administration of President Joe Biden, which has signaled it won’t enforce the law — which was passed with overwhelming bipartisan support — beginning Sunday, his final full day in office.
“TikTok should remain available to Americans, but simply under American ownership or other ownership that addresses the national security concerns identified by Congress in developing this law,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said in a statement, noting that actions to implement the law will fall to the new administration.
TikTok released a statement late Friday saying “statements issued today by both the Biden White House and the Department of Justice have failed to provide the necessary clarity and assurance to the service providers that are integral to maintaining TikTok’s availability to over 170 million Americans.”
“Unless the Biden Administration immediately provides a definitive statement to satisfy the most critical service providers assuring non-enforcement, unfortunately TikTok will be forced to go dark on January 19,” the statement said.
A sale does not appear imminent and, although experts have said the app will not disappear from existing users’ phones once the law takes effect, new users won’t be able to download it and updates won’t be available.