Nigerian authorities guilty of violating protesters rights during mass demonstrations against police brutality, known as #EndSars, in 2020. Why hasn't police behaviour changed?
Can Africa's booming population be harnessed?
And can anyone stand in the way of another presidential term for Rwanda's  Paul Kagame?
Presenter: Audrey Brown
Producers: Charles Gitonga and Frenny Jowi in Nairobi. Nyasha Michelle and Joseph Keen in London.
Technical producer. Philip Bull
Senior Journalist: Paul Bakibinga
Editors : Alice Muthengi and Andre Lombard.
Tevi Troy joins us to discuss the Biden press conference, which revealed his determination to stay in the race and what that might mean for suffering Democrats and liberals (more suffering). Give a listen.
What should mining stock shareholders look for in a stock? We chat with TeraWulf CFO Patrick Fleury.
Welcome back to The Mining Pod! Today we are joined by Patrick Fleury, the CFO of publicly traded mining company TeraWulf to discuss public mining markets, TeraWulf itself and how mining shareholders should think about Bitcoin mining companies!
Timestamps:
00:00 Start
02:24 Patrick's background
05:08 Terawulf partnerships
09:17 Financials
16:38 Nondisclosure is bull$#!T
20:15 Shareholder dilution
27:01 Issuing equity at a terahash value
35:27 Current lab projects
40:58 Terawulf lines of business
46:48 Cloud & GPU contracts
52:44 Energy contracts as assets
Published twice weekly, "The Mining Pod" interviews the best builders and operators in the Bitcoin and Bitcoin mining landscape. Subscribe to get notifications when we publish interviews on Tuesday and a news show on Friday!
Tourism is big money for many tribes and individual entrepreneurs. But it also has the potential to diminish people’s quality of life. Residents in Juneau, Alaska are considering a limit on the dozens of cruise ships that unload thousands of visitors there every summer. Among other things, critics say the steady stream of outsiders detracts from what they enjoy about living there. Some tribes have closed off tourist attractions altogether. We’ll find out about “overtourism” and ways to avoid it.
President Biden insists he's running to finish the job, but more Democrats call on him to drop out. Oppressive heat grips much of the nation. CBS News Correspondent Steve Kathan has today's World News Roundup.
Fifty years ago, Mafat and Tulsi Patel opened their first grocery store off Damen and Devon avenues. Fast forward to 2024, and Patel Brothers is the nation’s largest Indian grocery chain with 52 stores across the country.
Reset learns how the iconic grocer came to be and the impact of connecting the community with South Asian foods and ingredients with one of the partners, Swetal Patel.
For a full archive of Reset interviews, head over to wbez.org/reset.
Artificial intelligence is already making a difference in the theatre of war, and more involvement will certainly come. That raises a host of thorny ethical issues. In some cases, scientists just clocked, extinct beasts’ DNA can be extraordinarily well preserved—revealing once-inaccessible biological secrets (10:43). And remembering Pål Enger, who never quite knew why he felt compelled to steal “The Scream” (19:25).
President Biden held a press conference on the sidelines of the NATO summit and his performance was closely watched by Democratic lawmakers, European allies and the American public. A new NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll measured public opinion about President Biden post-debate, and Israel ordered hundreds of thousands of people in Gaza City to evacuate.
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Today's episode of Up First was edited by Dana Farrington, Roberta Rampton, Mark Katkov, Janaya Williams and Alice Woelfle. It was produced by Ziad Buchh, Ben Abrams and Kaity Kline. We get engineering support from Arthur Laurent. And our technical director is Carleigh Strange.