Las 5 cosas que debes saber este 19 de febrero

Kraig Pakulski 0 24 Article rating: No rating

Por CNN en Español

EE.UU. estaría listo para atacar Irán, pero Trump no ha tomado una decisión final. Interrogan a Zuckerberg sobre si Instagram fue diseñado para ser adictivo. La vida en Cuba se paraliza bajo la presión de Washington. Esto es lo que debes saber para comenzar el día. Primero la verdad.

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El expríncipe Andrés, hermano del rey Carlos III, fue arrestado bajo sospecha de conducta inapropiada en un cargo público, dijo la policía británica. Las autoridades habían dicho previamente que estaban revisando las acusaciones de que una mujer fue traficada al Reino Unido por Jeffrey Epstein para tener un encuentro sexual con Mountbatten-Windsor, y las afirmaciones de que compartió información confidencial con el delincuente sexual convicto mientras se desempeñaba como enviado comercial del Reino Unido.

Sin comida, sin combustible, sin turistas. Cuba podría estar viviendo el momento de mayor incertidumbre económica que los residentes han soportado en décadas. A través de la acción militar en Venezuela y amenazas de aranceles sobre México, el Gobierno de Trump ha cerrado el flujo de petróleo a la isla, intentando forzarla a hacer reformas políticas y económicas significativas.

El Congreso de Perú eligió a José María Balcázar, del partido Perú Libre, como su presidente, por lo que dirigirá el Gobierno hasta la investidura del ganador o ganadora de las elecciones que tendrán lugar el 12 de abril. Tras la destitución de José Jerí, Balcázar se convierte en el octavo mandatario desde la presidencia de Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, en medio de una década de inestabilidad política en el país.

Las Fuerzas Armadas de Estados Unidos están preparadas para atacar a Irán desde este fin de semana, aunque el presidente Donald Trump aún no ha tomado una decisión final sobre si autorizará tales acciones, dijeron a CNN fuentes familiarizadas con el asunto.

He drew a line with Trump. Now Oklahoma’s governor is facing the president’s ire again

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By Eric Bradner, CNN

(CNN) — Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt arrived in Washington this week with invitations to two White House meetings from an angry President Donald Trump.

Trump and Stitt, chair of the National Governors Association, were at odds over whether all the nation’s governors should be invited to the White House for what’s typically a bipartisan annual event. Trump’s administration initially had only invited Republicans, leading Stitt to tell governors that the NGA wouldn’t play a role in facilitating the Friday morning event.

Trump also took to his social media website, Truth Social, to declare that he wouldn’t invite two Democratic governors — Maryland’s Wes Moore and Colorado’s Jared Polis — to Saturday’s White House dinner. Trump said Moore and Polis “are not worthy of being there.”

Because all governors weren’t invited, Stitt initially told NGA members in a letter that the association would not play a role in facilitating the White House business meeting. Days later, Stitt told governors the White House had reversed course and invited all governors to the Friday morning meeting. “President Trump said this was always his intention, and we have addressed the misunderstanding in scheduling,” Stitt said in the letter to governors.

But the damage was done. Eighteen Democratic governors said they were boycotting Saturday’s dinner, and some also said they wouldn’t go to the Friday morning meeting.

And it ultimately rekindled the long-simmering conflict between Trump and Stitt, one of just a few Republican elected officials willing to publicly challenge the president.

Behind closed doors, Trump was incensed that Stitt, whose state voted overwhelming for Trump, would “defend two Democratic governors,” a White House official told CNN.

Trump called Stitt directly to vent his frustration, telling him that it was his White House and he could invite or not invite whoever he wanted, the official said. The call was followed by a litany of social media posts taking aim at the Oklahoma governor.

Stitt told CNN’s Dana Bash at an event hosted by the Milken Institute on Wednesday that he told Trump the president was free to “invite whoever you want to the White House,” but that if all governors weren’t invited, it couldn’t be an NGA event.

“This ability to talk about issues, I think, is really important, and I think the American people want to see it happen,” Stitt said.

Trump and Stitt have a history of disputes

The unraveling of the governors’ White House visits was the latest example of Trump battling with Democratic state leaders.

However, Stitt is a conservative, two-term Republican governor from a deep-red state that Trump won handily in three consecutive presidential elections.

Trump endorsed Stitt in 2018 and 2022, when he faced conservative opposition in his run for reelection. But Stitt did not return the favor in the lead-up to the 2024 Republican presidential primary. Instead, he endorsed Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. In a statement, Stitt called DeSantis a candidate who “can win and keep winning as a two-term president.” Trump is constitutionally barred from seeking another term after his current second one.

Multiple sources close to Trump said that the president’s disdain for Stitt began long before this latest episode. One source said that Trump blamed Stitt for a Read more

The island with an air-conditioned ‘forest’ to cope with scorching summers

Kraig Pakulski 0 25 Article rating: No rating

By Ulrike Lemmin-Woolfrey, CNN

(CNN) — When summers hit Qatar, most people retreat indoors during the heat of the day, sheltering at home or work with the aircon cranked high or visiting super-cooled shopping malls — and driving between them in cars chilled to refrigerator temperatures.

Being out in the open is something to be endured rather than enjoyed.

Until now. On Gewan Island – the latest addition to a man-made archipelago off the coast of the capital city Doha — visitors can comfortably stroll outside in the middle of a summer’s day thanks to a surprising innovation: an air-conditioned “forest.”

Stretching along the island’s central axis is a 450-meter-long — roughly one-third of a mile — promenade known as the Crystal Walk. Despite being open to the elements, its temperature is artificially regulated.

The walkway is covered by a canopy of tree-like structures that offer shelter from direct sunlight while helping trap cooled air blowing from vents below.

Outdoor air conditioning is no novelty in Qatar. In Doha’s Al Gharrafa and Umm Al Seneem parks, people can exercise along cooled and shaded jogging routes. Outdoor shopping areas like Al Hazm Mall and West Walk also benefit from cold blasts piped up from the street.

Gewan — also spelled Jiwan — takes this to another level. The Crystal Walk provides shade from artificial branches covered in 10 tonnes of crystals that give it its name. These also use solar panels to convert the dazzling sun into electricity to help power the aircon. There are also mini water fountains for splashing through.

‘Genuinely amazed’

With the temperature at a pleasant 21-23 degrees Celsius — about 70-73 Fahrenheit — all year round, the area has quickly become Qatar’s newest tourist attraction.

“Gewan Island has now become a regular stop on my city tours,” says Siham Haleem, who has shown international visitors around Qatar for more than 15 years. “I visit it four or five times a week, and every single time my guests are genuinely amazed.”

They’re not just there for the temperatures. The crystal trees create an unusual urban landscape that regularly features in social media posts.

There are also crystal panels embedded in the floor — around 180 rectangular boxes, illuminated and protected by strong glass. Inside are intricate displays of landscapes, animals, cities and industry — organized into themes of desert, snow, forest, sea and machinery. Visitors encounter shoals of fish, crocodiles, penguin colonies and local motifs such as camel caravans and musical instruments.

Omar Abou Mourad, a Lebanese expat working in Doha, regularly brings his family. While the children enjoy the crystal displays, Abou Mourad appreciates the location and the modern engineering.

“It is an escape to a luxury world full of crystal-inspired design details, trendy restaurants and cafés, and stylish shops,” he says.

The area is also a record breaker, earning Guinness World Record titles as the largest outdoor air-conditioned mall, and as the largest outdoor interactive light canopy.

Before it became a tourist attraction, Gewan Island had a more functional role. The 400,000-square-meter site was originally a staging ground for the construction of The Pearl, a luxury residential area built on a complex of man-made islands.

From being essentially a builders’ yard, Gewan — named for a rare form of pearl — has undergone a remarkable transformation.

When seen from above, the island is divided roughly into thirds. The eastern end comprises private villas and residences. The central area offers walking routes, shops, cafes, restaurants and artworks. The western third will house a new hotel complex with a golf course and other leisure facilities.

And while much of Doha is built with cars in mind, Gewan, connected to

'A different set of rules': Thermal drone footage shows Musk's AI power plant flouting clean air regulations

Kraig Pakulski 0 23 Article rating: No rating

Thermal drone imagery showing more than a dozen unpermitted turbines operating at xAI's gas plant in Southaven, Mississippi.

Evan Simon // Floodlight

 

Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence company is continuing to fuel its data centers with unpermitted gas turbines, according to a Floodlight visual investigation. Thermal drone footage shows xAI is still burning gas at a facility in Southaven, Miss., despite a recent Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) ruling reiterating that doing so requires a state permit in advance.

State regulators in Mississippi maintain that since the turbines are parked on tractor trailers, they don’t require permits. However, the EPA has long required that such pollution sources be permitted under the Clean Air Act.

Any exemption for these machines “could leave these engines subject to no emission standards at all,” the agency wrote in a January final ruling.

However, thermal images captured by Floodlight — and analyzed by multiple experts — show more than a dozen unpermitted turbines still spewing pollutants at the plant nearly two weeks after the EPA’s recent ruling.

“That is a violation of the law,” said Bruce Buckheit, a former EPA air enforcement chief, after reviewing Floodlight’s images and EPA regulations.

xAI, which is seeking permits for dozens more turbines in Southaven, did not respond to multiple requests for comment. The EPA, which under Trump has initiated a record low number of enforcement actions, declined to answer questions about the turbines at Musk’s AI facilities and referred to local authorities on permits.

The first and only public hearing on the matter is scheduled for February 17, and the public comment period is still open.

The Trump administration has made AI a priority, but as data centers proliferate across the country, regulators are struggling to keep pace with the industry’s increasing reliance on custom-built power sources and their public health impacts on surrounding communities. And Southaven, where state regulators are at odds with federal guidance, is a prime example.

The turbines there help power Grok, the company’s controversial chat bot, and emit harmful pollutants linked to health problems such as asthma, lung cancer and heart attacks.

“The risk of living next to this type of power plant is well documented,” said Shaolei Ren, a UC Riverside associate professor who specializes in the health impacts of data centers. “From the health perspective, we know that this is not good.”

Southaven residents have voiced concerns for months over the noise and pollution emanating from the 114-acre site that is largely hidden from public view — a site xAI is looking to expand.

“For them to be releasing so much pollution in such a populated area, not to mention that the

$695K bitcoin? $21K ether? Here’s where 21 experts think crypto is headed next

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Different variants of the cryptocurrency, Dogecoin.

BBbirdZ // Shutterstock

 

By 2035 — a mere nine years from now — Finder.com’s panel of crypto experts believes bitcoin (BTC) will reach an average high of $695,882. Ether (ETH)? $21,856. And what about dogecoin (DOGE) and shiba inu (SHIB)? $0.82 and $0.0001010, respectively.

For bitcoin alone, that’s an increase of 923% based on its current price of $68K, at the time of writing. But surprisingly, less than half of Finder’s panel believes these digital currencies are a buy right now.

So, what’s going on here?

Price forecast snapshot: 2026–2035

Every quarter, Finder asks a panel of crypto specialists where they see prices headed for year-end, 2030 and 2035. Here are the averages of those predictions across four digital currencies.

Table listing price forecast snapshot for 2026–2035.

Finder.com

If these forecasts actually play out, bitcoin would gain more than half a million in value, ether would clear $20K and even shiba inu would drop a zero. Returns like these would be hundreds of times greater than the stock market’s historical average annual return of around 10%.

With potential increases like these, you’d think Finder’s panel would be screaming at everyone to buy crypto now — right?

Well, it’s not quite that straightforward.

What the experts say to do right now

While surveying the panelists, Finder didn’t just ask about where crypto is headed. Here’s where the experts landed on whether to buy, hold or sell your crypto holdings.

Table listing percentage of likelihood to buy, hold, or sell crypto holdings.

Finder.com

That’s a shocking disconnect. Finder’s experts are predicting returns that astronomically outpace traditional investments, but fewer than half recommend investing in any of the coins they were asked about.

So, why is the panel predicting these absurd increases, but isn’t telling you to invest? Let’s start with bitcoin, where the disconnect is most dramatic.

Bitcoin (BTC)

Finder’s panel average prediction for bitcoin by year-end is $133,688, but behind that average is a massive range of opinion. That divide onl

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