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Teen basketball is for pros

Kraig Pakulski 0 27 Article rating: No rating

By Leah Asmelash, CNN

(CNN) — When King Bacot took the floor in the starting lineup for Petersburg High School in the Virginia state championship game, it was in front of a sellout crowd and his coaches sported matching burgundy suits.

King was already used to a big-time basketball atmosphere. He has multiple recruiting offers from Division 1 schools, a manager and more than 100,000 followers on Instagram. He’s received endorsement offers and has traveled all over the country for basketball tournaments, workouts and gym sessions with NBA trainers.

He’s also a 15-year-old freshman.

The last time Petersburg won a title game was 52 years ago, when reporters from all over the country marveled at their 6-foot-10, 19-year-old senior superstar named Moses Malone. After leading his team to back-to-back undefeated championship seasons, Malone upended college and pro basketball alike by taking a seven-year, $3 million deal with the Utah Stars of the American Basketball Association — making him the first modern player to jump from high school to the pros.

King is many things, at a young age, but he’s not Moses Malone. He was not even the flashiest player on his own Petersburg team — that would be senior Latrell Allmond, a McDonald’s All-American headed to Oklahoma State. In the championship game, Allmond put up 15 points, 8 rebounds and 4 blocks in a 56–35 victory over Lake Taylor. King scored only 9, while busily directing traffic and delivering the ball to his go-getting teammates. Some writeups of the game left him out entirely.

King doesn’t need to be a legend just yet. As one of the top-ranked players in the high-school class of 2029, he’s already part of a professional-style network of fame, opportunity and obligation. He arrived at Petersburg along with its new head coach, Ty White, who was not only an established championship high school coach but the head of a powerhouse AAU squad called Team Loaded, whose teen superstars joined the new program at Petersburg.

In season, King said he leaves for the gym at 6 a.m., goes to school, goes to the gym again, and then gets home again around 10 p.m. He was hosting back-to-school giveaways and signing autographs when he was in middle school. Now, he’s in negotiations to sign a paid endorsement deal with a major shoe company.

“The phone rings all the time,” said Joya Bacot, King’s mother. “It could be schools, it could be brands, it could be anybody that wants King to be a part of what they got going on.”

For a teen star like King, the chasm that Malone once had to hurdle between the Petersburg High School varsity team and professional basketball has been replaced by something more like a tricky but continuous series of conveyor belts. Players used to be required to serve long apprenticeships as amateurs before getting paid for their abilities: playing local high school and AAU ball, or possibly being recruited to a regional powerhouse private school, and then moving on to an unpaid commitment to a college program before eventually, possibly, getting drafted the NBA, or making their way to an overseas pro league.

Now, that sequence has collapsed. Over the course of the past decade, college players secured the right to receive sponsorship money, booster funds and a share of athletic revenue for themselves. At the same time, they began hopping or being pushed from school to school through the NCAA’s transfer portal en masse, following money or on-court opportunity. College basketball is a professional sport in its own right, with the best players earning seven figures.

And the level of basketball below has been transformed as well. Players still in secondary s

A piece of France’s Eiffel Tower is now up for grabs. You’ll need deep pockets

Kraig Pakulski 0 28 Article rating: No rating

By Lianne Kolirin, CNN

(CNN) — Experiencing the Eiffel Tower can be a crowded affair – about 7 million people visit each year – but now you can enjoy a part of this majestic French monument in your own home.

A piece of the Parisian landmark’s original staircase is going up for auction in the French capital next month.

There are a couple of catches, however: Bidders will need deep pockets to buy it and high ceilings to store it.

Section no. 1 of the original spiral staircase connected the second and third floors of the tower when it opened in 1889. Made of steel and riveted sheet metal, it comprises 14 steps resting on a cross-shaped base and measures 2.75 meters high (9 feet) and 1.75 meters (5.7 feet) in diameter.

About 300 million people have visited the world-famous French landmark since it first opened during the Universal Exposition, a fair celebrating the 100th anniversary of the French Revolution.

For almost a century, those visitors would have climbed to the top via these steps, but in 1983 the monument underwent a major overhaul and sections of the staircase were dismantled and replaced with elevators.

On May 21, this part of the historic staircase will be auctioned off by Artcurial’s Art Deco department in Paris.

According to a listing on Artcurial’s website, it is expected to fetch between €120,000 ($140,000) and €150,000 ($175,000). Although the seller has not been publicly identified, the auction house said that this piece has remained in the same private collection for “over 40 years” since it was dismantled in 1983.

“It has never been outside and underwent a complete restoration for the sale,” Sabrina Dolla, associate director at Artcurial, told CNN in an email.

According to Artcurial, this sale represents a rare opportunity to purchase a piece of this historic monument.

Dolla described the staircase section as “more than just a piece of history,” adding: “It’s an immersive experience, a stationary journey through time and space. Imagine yourself in 1889 on this staircase, perched between 113 and 276 meters high, with no safety barriers, but with a 360-degree view of Paris.”

There were 20 sections of the staircase that were sold off in 1983 and the majority of those remain in the possession of their original buyers.

In France, sections can be found in two Paris museums: the Musée d’Orsay and the Cité des Sciences. There’s also a section in eastern France, at the Musée de l’Histoire du Fer.

Further afield, some of the steps are also on display in the Yoishii Foundation gardens in Yamanashi in Japan and another near the Statue of Liberty in New York.

Artcurial has previously sold sections that have attracted keen interest from bidders. The most valuable proved to be section 13, which sold for €523,800 (about $612,000) in 2016.

Dolla said of that record high sale: “It was in good condition (like the one we’re presenting), and above all because a new Chinese collector wanted it at any cost. Ultimately, it’s a matter of circumstances and opportunities.”

CNN’s Francesca Street contributed to this report.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2026 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

The post A piece of France’s Eiffel Tower is now up for grabs. You’ll need deep pockets appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

Las 5 cosas que debes saber este 8 de abril

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CNN en Español

La primera foto desde la cara oculta de la Luna. La ofensiva inmigratoria de Trump podría dejar sin trabajo a médicos de otros países que ejercen en EE.UU. Un informe de la CIDH pone la lupa en las misiones médicas de Cuba. Esto es lo que debes saber para comenzar el día. Primero la verdad.

Tras un mes y medio de escalada del conflicto en Medio Oriente, Estados Unidos e Irán acordaron este martes un alto el fuego de dos semanas, menos de dos horas antes del plazo límite fijado por el presidente Donald Trump, quien había prometido aniquilar a “toda una civilización”. Sin embargo, persiste una profunda división entre ambos países. ¿Qué ha dicho cada uno y cuáles son los términos del acuerdo? Esto es lo que debes saber.

La misión Artemis II está camino a la Tierra tras sobrevolar el lado oscuro de la Luna en una trayectoria sin precedentes que les permitió adentrarse en el espacio más profundamente que cualquier viaje humano anterior. Un sobrevuelo lunar de gran amplitud ofreció a la tripulación vistas sin precedentes del hemisferio oculto de la Luna. En ese momento, el equipo tomó la primera foto desde la cara oculta de la Luna: la Tierra ocultándose en el horizonte lunar.

Los cambios en las políticas de la administración de Trump están dejando a un número creciente de médicos inmigrantes en una situación de incertidumbre. Muchos de ellos, que llegaron legalmente a Estados Unidos, se enfrentan ahora a demoras indefinidas en la resolución de sus solicitudes de visa, permisos de trabajo, residencia permanente y ciudadanía.

Sospechosos del ataque frente a residencia del alcalde de Nueva York detallaron sus planes en cuadernos y grabaciones

Kraig Pakulski 0 17 Article rating: No rating

Por Alex Stambaugh y Emma Tucker, CNN

Dos hombres acusados ​​de intentar detonar bombas caseras durante las protestas cerca de la residencia del alcalde de la ciudad de Nueva York, Zohran Mamdani, el mes pasado, detallaron en un cuaderno y a través de grabaciones de audio cómo esperaban que su ataque matara a decenas de personas, según una acusación formal publicada el martes.

Emir Balat, de 18 años, e Ibrahim Kayumi, de 19, quienes fueron arrestados el 7 de marzo frente a Gracie Mansion, fueron acusados ​​de ocho delitos, entre ellos proporcionar apoyo material a una organización terrorista extranjera y conspirar para usar un arma de destrucción masiva en el ataque inspirado por ISIS, según informaron los fiscales federales.

“Lo único que sé es que quiero sembrar el terror, hermano” y “Quiero aterrorizar a esta gente”, le dijo Kayumi a Balat la mañana del ataque, según un video grabado por la cámara del tablero del auto mientras los dos viajaban de Pensilvania a Manhattan, según la acusación.

Según explicó, Mamdani, el primer alcalde musulmán de la ciudad, y su esposa, Rama Duwaji, no se encontraban en casa en ese momento.

La acusación detalla las pruebas obtenidas del vehículo presuntamente utilizado por Balat y Kayumi, ciudadanos estadounidenses de Pensilvania, incluyendo una libreta manuscrita y aproximadamente tres días de grabaciones de video y audio de la cámara del salpicadero.

El cuaderno incluía los pasos de su plan, entre ellos una lista de ingredientes y equipos necesarios para mezclar explosivos y los pasos para construir una bomba.

En otra parte del cuaderno, figuraban detalles de un aparente plan alternativo para un ataque utilizando un vehículo y una lista de posibles objetivos, “que incluían ‘festivales’, ‘desfiles’, ‘protestas’ y ‘celebraciones’”, según indica el documento.

Según el documento, las grabaciones de la cámara del salpicadero, captadas durante su trayecto desde Pensilvania hasta Manhattan, detallaban las conversaciones sobre cómo llevarían a cabo el ataque, el probable resultado del mismo y cómo tenían como objetivo a “el gobierno” y a “los civiles”.

Tras el ataque, agentes del FBI recuperaron “restos de explosivos y materiales para fabricar bombas” del interior de un almacén en Pensilvania que Balat había alquilado pocos días antes, según el documento. Entre las pruebas se encontraban dos recipientes con residuos del potente explosivo TATP.

CNN se ha puesto en contacto con los abogados de Balat y Kayumi para obtener comentarios.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2026 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

Con información de Gloria Pazmino y Chris Boyette, de CNN

The post Sospechosos del ataque frente a residencia del alcalde de Nueva York detallaron sus planes en cuadernos y grabaciones appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

The demise of software engineering jobs has been greatly exaggerated

Kraig Pakulski 0 26 Article rating: No rating

By Nathaniel Meyersohn, CNN

New York (CNN) — Computer science and engineering students at the University of Washington, spooked about AI, returned from spring break last week to a surprising email from the department head.

“I’m reaching out because I keep hearing concerns about AI and the future of (computer science) careers,” Magdalena Balazinska, director of Washington’s Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering, wrote to more than 2,000 undergraduates.

Her message: AI is not killing your job options. It’s expanding them.

AI is making it possible to produce more with fewer workers. Anthropic’s Claude, OpenAI’s Codex and other AI tools can pump out code faster than ever, stoking fears that AI will one day replace software developer jobs entirely. Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff said the company stopped hiring engineers last year, and roughly half the US public believes AI will lead to fewer software jobs in the future. Rapid advancements in software development may be a signal of what AI will soon do to other fields.

But job openings for developers are growing. Companies believe they will pump out more software now that nearly anyone can be a coder with AI, increasing demand for seasoned engineers to shape these products.

Instead of wiping out jobs, AI is shifting the tasks of developers. They are doing less routine coding work and devoting more of their schedule to overseeing swarms of AI-powered code-writing agents — autonomous bots that can complete tasks. Engineers, in turn, are spending more time designing the structure of software and generating ideas.

“The job will look different. That doesn’t mean it’s going away,” said Amanda Richardson, the CEO of CoderPad, a hiring platform companies use to interview software engineers. “The best engineers are spending all day, every day with AI and using it to make their designs better.”

This has created a chaotic transition period, potentially hurting engineers who are reluctant to use AI or struggle to keep up with the technology.

Hiring engineers

Listings for software engineer jobs on Indeed are up 11% annually, a faster clip than postings overall, according to analysis by Citadel Securities. Companies are expanding their software budgets and increasing engineer headcounts, a Bank of America survey found. The long-term outlook for the job appears strong, too. Software developer employment will grow 15% by 2034, the Bureau of Labor Statistics projects.

Most computer science majors at the University of Washington are still taking full-time engineering positions in the tech industry after they graduate, Balazinska told students in her email.

Industries experiencing rapid technological change have historically shown employment growth, and software development may be the latest example, said James Bessen, executive director of the Technology & Policy Research Initiative at Boston University.

New technologies don’t just replace labor with machines — they also reduce prices and improve product quality. This increases customer demand and drives up employment.

Automation drove down the cost of producing textiles in the 19th century, leading to a 100-fold increa

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